an issue with the way the UnwindLLDB was handing out RegisterContexts: it
was making shared pointers to register contexts and then handing out just
the pointers (which would get put into shared pointers in the thread and
stack frame classes) and cause double free issues. MallocScribble helped to
find these issues after I did some other cleanup. To help avoid any
RegisterContext issue in the future, all code that deals with them now
returns shared pointers to the register contexts so we don't end up with
multiple deletions. Also now that the RegisterContext class doesn't require
a stack frame, we patched a memory leak where a StackFrame object was being
created and leaked.
Made the RegisterContext class not have a pointer to a StackFrame object as
one register context class can be used for N inlined stack frames so there is
not a 1 - 1 mapping. Updates the ExecutionContextScope part of the
RegisterContext class to never return a stack frame to indicate this when it
is asked to recreate the execution context. Now register contexts point to the
concrete frame using a concrete frame index. Concrete frames are all of the
frames that are actually formed on the stack of a thread. These concrete frames
can be turned into one or more user visible frames due to inlining. Each
inlined stack frame has the exact same register context (shared via shared
pointers) as any parent inlined stack frames all the way up to the concrete
frame itself.
So now the stack frames and the register contexts should behave much better.
llvm-svn: 122976
Fixed the display of complex numbers in lldb_private::DataExtractor::Dump(...)
and also fixed other edge display cases in lldb_private::ClangASTType::DumpTypeValue(...).
llvm-svn: 122895
table offset where the offset is within a section. Increased the section
offset for line table entries to be 32 bits (from 24 bits), giving each
section a 4G offset, and increased the section index to 32 bits (from 8 bits).
llvm-svn: 122200
function and also hooked up better error reporting for when things fail.
Fixed issues with trying to display children of pointers when none are
supposed to be shown (no children for function pointers, and more like this).
This was causing child value objects to be made that were correctly firing
an assertion.
llvm-svn: 121841
values or persistent expression variables. Now if an expression consists of
a value that is a child of a variable, or of a persistent variable only, we
will create a value object for it and make a ValueObjectConstResult from it to
freeze the value (for program variables only, not persistent variables) and
avoid running JITed code. For everything else we still parse up and JIT code
and run it in the inferior.
There was also a lot of clean up in the expression code. I made the
ClangExpressionVariables be stored in collections of shared pointers instead
of in collections of objects. This will help stop a lot of copy constructors on
these large objects and also cleans up the code considerably. The persistent
clang expression variables were moved over to the Target to ensure they persist
across process executions.
Added the ability for lldb_private::Target objects to evaluate expressions.
We want to evaluate expressions at the target level in case we aren't running
yet, or we have just completed running. We still want to be able to access the
persistent expression variables between runs, and also evaluate constant
expressions.
Added extra logging to the dynamic loader plug-in for MacOSX. ModuleList objects
can now dump their contents with the UUID, arch and full paths being logged with
appropriate prefix values.
Thread hardened the Communication class a bit by making the connection auto_ptr
member into a shared pointer member and then making a local copy of the shared
pointer in each method that uses it to make sure another thread can't nuke the
connection object while it is being used by another thread.
Added a new file to the lldb/test/load_unload test that causes the test a.out file
to link to the libd.dylib file all the time. This will allow us to test using
the DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable after moving libd.dylib somewhere else.
llvm-svn: 121745
access to the members of the Objective-C self object.
The approach we take is to generate the method as a
@category on top of the self object, and to pass the
"self" pointer to it. (_cmd is currently NULL.)
Most changes are in ClangExpressionDeclMap, but the
change that adds support to the ABIs to pass _cmd
touches a fair amount of code.
llvm-svn: 121722
very minor changes, changing how we get the target
type from a TypedefType, adding a parameter to
EnumDecl::Create(), and other minor tweaks.
llvm-svn: 121663
information. Previously, "operator[]" was not
being recognized because the detector was looking
for "operator " as a prefix. Now we handle both
cases.
llvm-svn: 121456
because the diagnostic client for one of the AST
contexts is NULL. Now we provide a form of Miranda
rights to AST contexts: they are provided with a very
simple diagnostic client if they do not have one
themselves.
llvm-svn: 121225
wrongly as the target of a pointer rather than the
SEL pointer itself. This caused incorrect behavior
when dealing with Objective-C selector variables.
llvm-svn: 121048
in C++ methods. There were two fixes involved:
- For an object whose contents are not known, the
expression should be treated as a non-member, and
"this" should have no meaning.
- For a const object, the method should be declared
const as well.
llvm-svn: 120606
that the result of an expression should be coerced to
a specific type. Also made breakpoint conditions pass
in the bool type for this type.
The expression parser ignores this indication for now.
llvm-svn: 119779
can too. So now the lldb_private::Variable class has support for this.
Variables now have support for having a basename ("i"), and a mangled name
("_ZN12_GLOBAL__N_11iE"), and a demangled name ("(anonymous namespace)::i").
Nowwhen searching for a variable by name, users might enter the fully qualified
name, or just the basename. So new test functions were added to the Variable
and Mangled classes as:
bool NameMatches (const ConstString &name);
bool NameMatches (const RegularExpression ®ex);
I also modified "ClangExpressionDeclMap::FindVariableInScope" to also search
for global variables that are not in the current file scope by first starting
with the current module, then moving on to all modules.
Fixed an issue in the DWARF parser that could cause a varaible to get parsed
more than once. Now, once we have parsed a VariableSP for a DIE, we cache
the result even if a variable wasn't made so we don't do any re-parsing. Some
DW_TAG_variable DIEs don't have locations, or are missing vital info that
stops a debugger from being able to display anything for it, we parse a NULL
variable shared pointer for these DIEs so we don't keep trying to reparse it.
llvm-svn: 119085
types to their full definitions more than we needed to. This caused an assertion
in the DWARF parser to fire -- which is an indication that we are parsing too much.
llvm-svn: 119020
breakpoints on inlined functions by name. This involved fixing the DWARF parser
to correctly back up and parse the concrete function when we find inlined
functions by name, then grabbing any appropriate inlined blocks and returning
symbol contexts with the block filled in. After this was fixed, the breakpoint
by name resolver needed to correctly deal with symbol contexts that had the
inlined block filled in in the symbol contexts.
llvm-svn: 119017
cases when getting the clang type:
- need only a forward declaration
- need a clang type that can be used for layout (members and args/return types)
- need a full clang type
This allows us to partially parse the clang types and be as lazy as possible.
The first case is when we just need to declare a type and we will complete it
later. The forward declaration happens only for class/union/structs and enums.
The layout type allows us to resolve the full clang type _except_ if we have
any modifiers on a pointer or reference (both R and L value). In this case
when we are adding members or function args or return types, we only need to
know how the type will be laid out and we can defer completing the pointee
type until we later need it. The last type means we need a full definition for
the clang type.
Did some renaming of some enumerations to get rid of the old "DC" prefix (which
stands for DebugCore which is no longer around).
Modified the clang namespace support to be almost ready to be fed to the
expression parser. I made a new ClangNamespaceDecl class that can carry around
the AST and the namespace decl so we can copy it into the expression AST. I
modified the symbol vendor and symbol file plug-ins to use this new class.
llvm-svn: 118976
needs to use the current pc and current offset in two ways: To
determine which function we are currently executing, and the decide
how much of that function has executed so far. For the former use,
we need to back up the saved pc value by one byte if we're going to
use the correct function's unwind information -- we may be executing
a CALL instruction at the end of a function and the following instruction
belongs to a new function, or we may be looking at unwind information
which only covers the call instruction and not the subsequent instruction.
But when we're talking about deciding which row of an UnwindPlan to
execute, we want to use the actual byte offset in the function, not the
byte offset - 1.
Right now RegisterContextLLDB is tracking both the "real" offset and
an "offset minus one" and different parts of the class have to know
which one to use and they need to be updated/set in tandem. I want
to revisit this at some point.
The second change made in looking up eh_frame information; it was
formerly done by looking for the start address of the function we
are currently executing. But it is possible to have unwind information
for a function which only covers a small section of the function's
address range. In which case looking up by the start pc value may not
find the eh_frame FDE.
The hand-written _sigtramp() unwind info on Mac OS X, which covers
exactly one instruction in the middle of the function, happens to
trigger both of these issues.
I still need to get the UnwindPlan runner to handle arbitrary dwarf
expressions in the FDE but there's a good chance it will be easy to
reuse the DWARFExpression class to do this.
llvm-svn: 118882
comes from by using a virtual function to provide it from the Module's
SymbolVendor by default. This allows the DWARF parser, when being used to
parse DWARF in .o files with a parent DWARF + debug map parser, to get its
type list from the DWARF + debug map parser so when we go and find full
definitions for types (that might come from other .o files), we can use the
type list from the debug map parser. Otherwise we ended up mixing clang types
from one .o file (say a const pointer to a forward declaration "class A") with
the a full type from another .o file. This causes expression parsing, when
copying the clang types from those parsed by the DWARF parser into the
expression AST, to fail -- for good reason. Now all types are created in the
same list.
Also added host support for crash description strings that can be set before
doing a piece of work. On MacOSX, this ties in with CrashReporter support
that allows a string to be dispalyed when the app crashes and allows
LLDB.framework to print a description string in the crash log. Right now this
is hookup up the the CommandInterpreter::HandleCommand() where each command
notes that it is about to be executed, so if we crash while trying to do this
command, we should be able to see the command that caused LLDB to exit. For
all other platforms, this is a nop.
llvm-svn: 118672
FuncUnwinders object if the eh_frame section was missing
from an objfile. Worked fine on x86_64 but on i386 where
eh_frame is unusual, that resulted in the arch default
UnwindPlan being used all the time instead of picking up
an assembly profile based unwindplan.
llvm-svn: 118467
a pseudo terminal even when the process being attached to.
Fixed a possible crasher in the in:
bool
ClangASTContext::IsAggregateType (clang_type_t clang_type);
It seems that if you pass in a record decl, enum decl, or objc class decl
and ask it if it is an aggregate type, clang will crash.
llvm-svn: 118404
don't crash if we disable logging when some code already has a copy of the
logger. Prior to this fix, logs were handed out as pointers and if they were
held onto while a log got disabled, then it could cause a crash. Now all logs
are handed out as shared pointers so this problem shouldn't happen anymore.
We are also using our new shared pointers that put the shared pointer count
and the object into the same allocation for a tad better performance.
llvm-svn: 118319
fixed them. Added DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN to classes that should
not be bitwise copied. Added default initializers for member
variables that weren't being initialized in the ctor. Fixed a few
shadowed local variable mistakes.
llvm-svn: 118240
RegisterContextLLDB holds a reference to the SymbolContext
in the vector of Cursors that UnwindLLDB maintains. Switch
UnwindLLDB to hold a vector of shared pointers of Cursors
so this reference doesn't become invalid.
Correctly falling back from the "fast" UnwindPlan to the
"full" UnwindPlan when additional registers need to be
retrieved.
llvm-svn: 118218
by type ID (the most common type of type lookup).
Changed the API logging a bit to always show the objects in the OBJECT(POINTER)
format so it will be easy to locate all instances of an object or references
to it when looking at logs.
llvm-svn: 117641
all of the calls inlined in the header file for better performance.
Fixed the summary for C string types (array of chars (with any combo if
modifiers), and pointers to chars) work in all cases.
Fixed an issue where a forward declaration to a clang type could cause itself
to resolve itself more than once if, during the resolving of the type itself
it caused something to try and resolve itself again. We now remove the clang
type from the forward declaration map in the DWARF parser when we start to
resolve it and avoid this additional call. This should stop any duplicate
members from appearing and throwing all the alignment of structs, unions and
classes.
llvm-svn: 117437
loaded/parsed. Should add timers to this eventually.
Delay getting a full UnwindPlan if it's possible to unwind with
just a fast UnwindPlan. This keeps us from reading the eh_frame
section unless we hit something built -fomit-frame pointer or we
hit a frame with no symbol (read: no start address) available.
It doesn't look like it is correctly falling back to using the
full UnwindPlan to provide additional registers that the fast
UnwindPlan doesn't supply; e.g. go to the middle of a stack and
ask for r12 and it will show you the value of r12 in frame 0.
That's a bug for tomorrow.
llvm-svn: 117361
Not yet enabled as the default unwinder but there are no known
backtrace problems with the code at this point.
Added 'log enable lldb unwind' to help diagnose backtrace problems;
this output needs a little refining but it's a good first step.
eh_frame information is currently read unconditionally - the code
is structured to allow this to be delayed until it's actually needed.
There is a performance hit when you have to parse the eh_frame
information for any largeish executable/library so it's necessary
to avoid if possible.
It's confusing having both the UnwindPlan::RegisterLocation struct
and the RegisterConextLLDB::RegisterLocation struct, I need to rename
one of them.
The writing of registers isn't done in the RegisterConextLLDB subclass
yet; neither is the running of complex DWARF expressions from eh_frame
(e.g. used for _sigtramp on Mac OS X).
llvm-svn: 117256
Specifically, we fixed handling of the objc_class
built-in type, which allowed us to pass
named Objective-C objects to functions,
call variable list -t on objects safely, etc.
llvm-svn: 117249
So the issue here was that we have lldb_private::FileSpec that by default was
always resolving a path when using the:
FileSpec::FileSpec (const char *path);
and in the:
void FileSpec::SetFile(const char *pathname, bool resolve = true);
This isn't what we want in many many cases. One example is you have "/tmp" on
your file system which is really "/private/tmp". You compile code in that
directory and end up with debug info that mentions "/tmp/file.c". Then you
type:
(lldb) breakpoint set --file file.c --line 5
If your current working directory is "/tmp", then "file.c" would be turned
into "/private/tmp/file.c" which won't match anything in the debug info.
Also, it should have been just a FileSpec with no directory and a filename
of "file.c" which could (and should) potentially match any instances of "file.c"
in the debug info.
So I removed the constructor that just takes a path:
FileSpec::FileSpec (const char *path); // REMOVED
You must now use the other constructor that has a "bool resolve" parameter that you must always supply:
FileSpec::FileSpec (const char *path, bool resolve);
I also removed the default parameter to SetFile():
void FileSpec::SetFile(const char *pathname, bool resolve);
And fixed all of the code to use the right settings.
llvm-svn: 116944
debug information and you evaluated an expression, a crash would occur as a
result of an unchecked pointer.
Added the ability to get the expression path for a ValueObject. For a rectangle
point child "x" the expression path would be something like: "rect.top_left.x".
This will allow GUI and command lines to get ahold of the expression path for
a value object without having to explicitly know about the hierarchy. This
means the ValueObject base class now has a "ValueObject *m_parent;" member.
All ValueObject subclasses now correctly track their lineage and are able
to provide value expression paths as well.
Added a new "--flat" option to the "frame variable" to allow for flat variable
output. An example of the current and new outputs:
(lldb) frame variable
argc = 1
argv = 0x00007fff5fbffe80
pt = {
x = 2
y = 3
}
rect = {
bottom_left = {
x = 1
y = 2
}
top_right = {
x = 3
y = 4
}
}
(lldb) frame variable --flat
argc = 1
argv = 0x00007fff5fbffe80
pt.x = 2
pt.y = 3
rect.bottom_left.x = 1
rect.bottom_left.y = 2
rect.top_right.x = 3
rect.top_right.y = 4
As you can see when there is a lot of hierarchy it can help flatten things out.
Also if you want to use a member in an expression, you can copy the text from
the "--flat" output and not have to piece it together manually. This can help
when you want to use parts of the STL in expressions:
(lldb) frame variable --flat
argc = 1
argv = 0x00007fff5fbffea8
hello_world._M_dataplus._M_p = 0x0000000000000000
(lldb) expr hello_world._M_dataplus._M_p[0] == '\0'
llvm-svn: 116532
artifical members (like the vtable pointer member that shows up in the DWARF).
We were adding this to each class which was making all member variables be off
by a pointer size.
Added a test case so we can track this with "test/forward".
Fixed the type name index in DWARF to include all the types after finding
some types were being omitted due to the DW_AT_specification having the
DW_AT_declaration attribute which was being read into the real type instances
when there were forward declarations in the DWARF, causing the type to be
omitted. We now check to make sure any DW_AT_declaration values are only
respected when parsing types if the attribute is from the current DIE.
After fixing the missing types, we ran into some issues with the expression
parser finding duplicate entries for __va_list_tag since they are built in
types and would result in a "duplicate __va_list_tag definition" error. We
are now just ignoring this name during lookup, but we will need to see if
we can get the name lookup function to not get called in these cases.
Fixed an issue that would cause an assertion where DW_TAG_subroutine_types
that had no children, would not properly make a clang function type of:
"void (*) (void)".
llvm-svn: 116392
function. It will inspect NAME and do the following:
- if the name contains '(' or starts with "-[" or "+[" then a full name search
will happen to match full function names with args (C++ demangled names) or
full objective C method prototypes.
- if the name contains "::" and no '(', then it is assumed to be a qualified
function name that is in a namespace or class. For "foo::bar::baz" we will
search for any functions with the basename or method name of "baz", then
filter the results to only those that contain "foo::bar::baz". This allows
setting breakpoint on C++ functions and methods without having to fully
qualify all of the types that would appear in C++ mangled names.
- if the name contains ":" (not "::"), then NAME is assumed to be an ObjC
selector.
_ otherwise, we assume just a plain function basename.
Now that "--name" is our "auto" mode, I introduced the new "--basename" option
("breakpoint set --basename NAME") to allow for function names that aren't
methods or selectors, just basenames. This can also be used to ignore C++
namespaces and class hierarchies for class methods.
Fixed clang enumeration promotion types to be correct.
llvm-svn: 116293
being chopped up correctly). The DWARF plug-in also keeps a map of the ObjC
class names to selectors for easy parsing of all class selectors when we parse
the class type.
llvm-svn: 116290
lldb_private::RegularExpression compiles and matches with:
size_t
RegularExpression::GetErrorAsCString (char *err_str,
size_t err_str_max_len) const;
Added the ability to search a variable list for variables whose names match
a regular expression:
size_t
VariableList::AppendVariablesIfUnique (const RegularExpression& regex,
VariableList &var_list,
size_t& total_matches);
Also added the ability to append a variable to a VariableList only if it is
not already in the list:
bool
VariableList::AddVariableIfUnique (const lldb::VariableSP &var_sp);
Cleaned up the "frame variable" command:
- Removed the "-n NAME" option as this is the default way for the command to
work.
- Enable uniqued regex searches on variable names by fixing the "--regex RE"
command to work correctly. It will match all variables that match any
regular expressions and only print each variable the first time it matches.
- Fixed the option type for the "--regex" command to by eArgTypeRegularExpression
instead of eArgTypeCount
llvm-svn: 116178
Added a new SortOrder enumeration and hooked it up to the "image dump symtab"
command so we can dump symbol tables in the original order, sorted by address,
or sorted by name.
llvm-svn: 116049
if the address comes from a data section.
Fixed an issue that could occur when looking up a symbol that has a zero
byte size where no match would be returned even if there was an exact symbol
match.
Cleaned up the section dump output and added the section type into the output.
llvm-svn: 116017
operator naming stuff. We now get the constructor and destructor names right
after passing in the type, and we get the correct conversion operator name
after passing in the return type when getting the DeclarationNameInfo.
llvm-svn: 115398
Added the start of Host specific launch services, though it currently isn't
hookup up to anything. We want to be able to launch a process and use the
native launch services to launch an app like it would be launched by the
user double clicking on the app. We also eventually want to be able to run
a command line app in a newly spawned terminal to avoid terminal sharing.
Fixed an issue with the new DWARF forward type declaration stuff. A crasher
was found that was happening when trying to properly expand the forward
declarations.
llvm-svn: 115213
This gets us the new clang::CXXRecordDecl improvments in clang so that when we
add fields, methods and other things to the clang::CXXRecordDecl, the correct
bits are automatically set by clang::CXXRecordDecl itself instead of having
SEMA and our lldb_private::ClangASTContext functions that create types for
DWARF do it all manually. This allows the clang::ASTContext deep copying of
types to work correctly and it means that the expression parser can now
evaluate expressions in the context of a class method correctly. Previously
when a class was copied from the DWARF generated ASTContext over into the
expression ASTContext, we were losing CXXRecordDecl bits in the conversion
which caused all classes to think they were at offset zero because the the
bools for empty, POD, and others would end up being incorrect.
llvm-svn: 115023
adding methods to C++ and objective C classes. In order to make methods, we
need the function prototype which means we need the arguments. Parsing these
could cause a circular reference that caused an assertion.
Added a new typedef for the clang opaque types which are just void pointers:
lldb::clang_type_t. This appears in lldb-types.h.
This was fixed by enabling struct, union, class, and enum types to only get
a forward declaration when we make the clang opaque qual type for these
types. When they need to actually be resolved, lldb_private::Type will call
a new function in the SymbolFile protocol to resolve a clang type when it is
not fully defined (clang::TagDecl::getDefinition() returns NULL). This allows
us to be a lot more lazy when parsing clang types and keeps down the amount
of data that gets parsed into the ASTContext for each module.
Getting the clang type from a "lldb_private::Type" object now takes a boolean
that indicates if a forward declaration is ok:
clang_type_t lldb_private::Type::GetClangType (bool forward_decl_is_ok);
So function prototypes that define parameters that are "const T&" can now just
parse the forward declaration for type 'T' and we avoid circular references in
the type system.
llvm-svn: 115012
Error in object runtime language detection code (spurious '; ')
Also replace false by NULL in a place where the compiler expects a pointer instead of a bool.
llvm-svn: 114957
interface in ClangASTContext. Also added two bool returning functions that
indicated if an opaque clang qual type is a CXX class type, and if it is an
ObjC class type.
Objective C classes now will get their methods added lazily as they are
encountered. The reason for this is currently, unlike C++, the
DW_TAG_structure_type and owns the ivars, doesn't not also contain the
member functions. This means when we parse the objective C class interface
we either need to find all functions whose names start with "+[CLASS_NAME"
or "-[CLASS_NAME" and add them all to the class, or when we parse each objective
C function, we slowly add it to the class interface definition. Since objective
C's class doesn't change internal bits according to whether it has certain types
of member functions (like C++ does if it has virtual functions, or if it has
user ctors/dtors), I currently chose to lazily populate the class when each
functions is parsed. Another issue we run into with ObjC method declarations
is the "self" and "_cmd" implicit args are not marked as artificial in the
DWARF (DW_AT_artifical), so we currently have to look for the parameters by
name if we are trying to omit artificial function args if the language of the
compile unit is ObjC or ObjC++.
llvm-svn: 114722
- Sema is now exported (and there was much rejoicing.)
- Storage classes are now centrally defined.
Also fixed some bugs that the new LLVM picked up.
llvm-svn: 114622
for C++ classes. Replaced it with a less hacky approach:
- If an expression is defined in the context of a
method of class A, then that expression is wrapped as
___clang_class::___clang_expr(void*) { ... }
instead of ___clang_expr(void*) { ... }.
- ___clang_class is resolved as the type of the target
of the "this" pointer in the method the expression
is defined in.
- When reporting the type of ___clang_class, a method
with the signature ___clang_expr(void*) is added to
that class, so that Clang doesn't complain about a
method being defined without a corresponding
declaration.
- Whenever the expression gets called, "this" gets
looked up, type-checked, and then passed in as the
first argument.
This required the following changes:
- The ABIs were changed to support passing of the "this"
pointer as part of trivial calls.
- ThreadPlanCallFunction and ClangFunction were changed
to support passing of an optional "this" pointer.
- ClangUserExpression was extended to perform the
wrapping described above.
- ClangASTSource was changed to revert the changes
required by the hack.
- ClangExpressionParser, IRForTarget, and
ClangExpressionDeclMap were changed to handle
different manglings of ___clang_expr flexibly. This
meant no longer searching for a function called
___clang_expr, but rather looking for a function whose
name *contains* ___clang_expr.
- ClangExpressionParser and ClangExpressionDeclMap now
remember whether "this" is required, and know how to
look it up as necessary.
A few inheritance bugs remain, and I'm trying to resolve
these. But it is now possible to use "this" as well as
refer implicitly to member variables, when in the proper
context.
llvm-svn: 114384
Fixed an issue with ClangASTContext::GetIndexOfChildMemberWithName()
where objective C ivars were not being found correctly if they were
the second or higher child.
llvm-svn: 114258
Added a "bool show_fullpaths" to many more objects that were
previously always dumping full paths.
Fixed a few places where the DWARF was not indexed when we
we needed it to be when making queries. Also fixed an issue
where the DWARF in .o files wasn't searching all .o files
for the types.
Fixed an issue with the output from "image lookup --type <TYPENAME>"
where the name and byte size might not be resolved and might not
display. We now call the accessors so we end up seeing all of the
type info.
llvm-svn: 113951
to return the correct result.
Fixed "bool Variable::IsInScope (StackFrame *frame)" to return the correct
result when there are no location lists.
Modified the "frame variable" command such that:
- if no arguments are given (dump all frame variables), then we only show
variables that are currently in scope
- if some arguments are given, we show an error if the variable is out of
scope
llvm-svn: 113830
debug map showed that the location lists in the .o files needed some
refactoring in order to work. The case that was failing was where a function
that was in the "__TEXT.__textcoal_nt" in the .o file, and in the
"__TEXT.__text" section in the main executable. This made symbol lookup fail
due to the way we were finding a real address in the debug map which was
by finding the section that the function was in in the .o file and trying to
find this in the main executable. Now the section list supports finding a
linked address in a section or any child sections. After fixing this, we ran
into issue that were due to DWARF and how it represents locations lists.
DWARF makes a list of address ranges and expressions that go along with those
address ranges. The location addresses are expressed in terms of a compile
unit address + offset. This works fine as long as nothing moves around. When
stuff moves around and offsets change between the remapped compile unit base
address and the new function address, then we can run into trouble. To deal
with this, we now store supply a location list slide amount to any location
list expressions that will allow us to make the location list addresses into
zero based offsets from the object that owns the location list (always a
function in our case).
With these fixes we can now re-link random address ranges inside the debugger
for use with our DWARF + debug map, incremental linking, and more.
Another issue that arose when doing the DWARF in the .o files was that GCC
4.2 emits a ".debug_aranges" that only mentions functions that are externally
visible. This makes .debug_aranges useless to us and we now generate a real
address range lookup table in the DWARF parser at the same time as we index
the name tables (that are needed because .debug_pubnames is just as useless).
llvm-gcc doesn't generate a .debug_aranges section, though this could be
fixed, we aren't going to rely upon it.
Renamed a bunch of "UINT_MAX" to "UINT32_MAX".
llvm-svn: 113829
union, or class that contained an enumeration type. When I was creating
the clang enumeration decl, I wasn't calling "EnumDecl::setIntegerType (QualType)"
which means that if the enum decl was ever asked to figure out it's bit width
(getTypeInfo()) it would crash. We didn't run into this with enum types that
weren't inside classes because the DWARF already told us how big the type was
and when we printed an enum we would never need to calculate the size, we
would use the pre-cached byte size we got from the DWARF. When the enum was
in a struct/union/class and we tried to layout the struct, the layout code
would attempt to get the type info and segfault.
llvm-svn: 113729
Fixed an issue where LLDB would fail to set a breakpoint by
file and line if the DWARF line table has multiple file entries
in the support files for a source file.
llvm-svn: 113721
we cached remapping information using the old nlist index to the
new symbol index, yet we tried to lookup the symbol stubs that
were for symbols that had been remapped by ID instead of using
the new symbol index. This is now fixed and the mach-o symbol tables
are fixed.
Use the delta between two vector entries to determine the stride
in case any padding is inserted by compilers for bsearch calls
on symbol tables when finding symbols by their original ID.
llvm-svn: 113719
They will now be represented as:
eSymbolTypeFunction: eSymbolTypeCode with IsDebug() == true
eSymbolTypeGlobal: eSymbolTypeData with IsDebug() == true and IsExternal() == true
eSymbolTypeStatic: eSymbolTypeData with IsDebug() == true and IsExternal() == false
This simplifies the logic when dealing with symbols and allows for symbols
to be coalesced into a single symbol most of the time.
Enabled the minimal symbol table for mach-o again after working out all the
kinks. We now get nice concise symbol tables and debugging with DWARF in the
.o files with a debug map in the binary works well again. There were issues
where the SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap symbol file parser was using symbol IDs and
symbol indexes interchangeably. Now that all those issues are resolved
debugging is working nicely.
llvm-svn: 113678
The Unwind and RegisterContext subclasses still need
to be finished; none of this code is used by lldb at
this point (unless you call into it by hand).
The ObjectFile class now has an UnwindTable object.
The UnwindTable object has a series of FuncUnwinders
objects (Function Unwinders) -- one for each function
in that ObjectFile we've backtraced through during this
debug session.
The FuncUnwinders object has a few different UnwindPlans.
UnwindPlans are a generic way of describing how to find
the canonical address of a given function's stack frame
(the CFA idea from DWARF/eh_frame) and how to restore the
caller frame's register values, if they have been saved
by this function.
UnwindPlans are created from different sources. One source is the
eh_frame exception handling information generated by the compiler
for unwinding an exception throw. Another source is an assembly
language inspection class (UnwindAssemblyProfiler, uses the Plugin
architecture) which looks at the instructions in the funciton
prologue and describes the stack movements/register saves that are
done.
Two additional types of UnwindPlans that are worth noting are
the "fast" stack UnwindPlan which is useful for making a first
pass over a thread's stack, determining how many stack frames there
are and retrieving the pc and CFA values for each frame (enough
to create StackFrameIDs). Only a minimal set of registers is
recovered during a fast stack walk.
The final UnwindPlan is an architectural default unwind plan.
These are provided by the ArchDefaultUnwindPlan class (which uses
the plugin architecture). When no symbol/function address range can
be found for a given pc value -- when we have no eh_frame information
and when we don't have a start address so we can't examine the assembly
language instrucitons -- we have to make a best guess about how to
unwind. That's when we use the architectural default UnwindPlan.
On x86_64, this would be to assume that rbp is used as a stack pointer
and we can use that to find the caller's frame pointer and pc value.
It's a last-ditch best guess about how to unwind out of a frame.
There are heuristics about when to use one UnwindPlan versues the other --
this will all happen in the still-begin-written UnwindLLDB subclass of
Unwind which runs the UnwindPlans.
llvm-svn: 113581
cleaning up the output of many GetDescription objects that are part of a
symbol context. This fixes an issue where no ranges were being printed out
for functions, blocks and symbols.
llvm-svn: 113571
symbol tables. Minimal symbol tables enable us to merge two symbols, one
debug symbol and one linker symbol, into a single symbol that can carry
just as much information and will avoid duplicate symbols in the symbol
table.
llvm-svn: 113223
parent, sibling and first child block, and access to the
inline function information.
Added an accessor the StackFrame:
Block * lldb_private::StackFrame::GetFrameBlock();
LLDB represents inline functions as lexical blocks that have
inlined function information in them. The function above allows
us to easily get the top most lexical block that defines a stack
frame. When there are no inline functions in function, the block
returned ends up being the top most block for the function. When
the PC is in an inlined funciton for a frame, this will return the
first parent block that has inlined function information. The
other accessor: StackFrame::GetBlock() will return the deepest block
that matches the frame's PC value. Since most debuggers want to display
all variables in the current frame, the Block returned by
StackFrame::GetFrameBlock can be used to retrieve all variables for
the current frame.
Fixed the lldb_private::Block::DumpStopContext(...) to properly
display inline frames a block should display all of its inlined
functions. Prior to this fix, one of the call sites was being skipped.
This is a separate code path from the current default where inlined
functions get their own frames.
Fixed an issue where a block would always grab variables for any
child inline function blocks.
llvm-svn: 113195
might dump file paths that allows the dumping of full paths or just the
basenames. Switched the stack frame dumping code to use just the basenames for
the files instead of the full path.
Modified the StackID class to no rely on needing the start PC for the current
function/symbol since we can use the SymbolContextScope to uniquely identify
that, unless there is no symbol context scope. In that case we can rely upon
the current PC value. This saves the StackID from having to calculate the
start PC when the StackFrame::GetStackID() accessor is called.
Also improved the StackID less than operator to correctly handle inlined stack
frames in the same stack.
llvm-svn: 112867
function statics, file globals and static variables) that a frame contains.
The StackFrame objects can give out ValueObjects instances for
each variable which allows us to track when a variable changes and doesn't
depend on variable names when getting value objects.
StackFrame::GetVariableList now takes a boolean to indicate if we want to
get the frame compile unit globals and static variables.
The value objects in the stack frames can now correctly track when they have
been modified. There are a few more tweaks needed to complete this work. The
biggest issue is when stepping creates partial stacks (just frame zero usually)
and causes previous stack frames not to match up with the current stack frames
because the previous frames only has frame zero. We don't really want to
require that all previous frames be complete since stepping often must check
stack frames to complete their jobs. I will fix this issue tomorrow.
llvm-svn: 112800
documentation. Symbol now inherits from the symbol
context scope so that the StackID can use a "SymbolContextScope *"
instead of a blockID (which could have been the same as some other
blockID from another symbol file).
Modified the stacks that are created on subsequent stops to reuse
the previous stack frame objects which will allow for some internal
optimization using pointer comparisons during stepping.
llvm-svn: 112495
complex inlined examples.
StackFrame classes don't have a "GetPC" anymore, they have "GetFrameCodeAddress()".
This is because inlined frames will have a PC value that is the same as the
concrete frame that owns the inlined frame, yet the code locations for the
frame can be different. We also need to be able to get the real PC value for
a given frame so that variables evaluate correctly. To get the actual PC
value for a frame you can use:
addr_t pc = frame->GetRegisterContext()->GetPC();
Some issues with the StackFrame stomping on its own symbol context were
resolved which were causing the information to change for a frame when the
stack ID was calculated. Also the StackFrame will now correctly store the
symbol context resolve flags for any extra bits of information that were
looked up (if you ask for a block only and you find one, you will alwasy have
the compile unit and function).
llvm-svn: 111964
which is now on by default. Frames are gotten from the unwinder as concrete
frames, then if inline frames are to be shown, extra information to track
and reconstruct these frames is cached with each Thread and exanded as needed.
I added an inline height as part of the lldb_private::StackID class, the class
that helps us uniquely identify stack frames. This allows for two frames to
shared the same call frame address, yet differ only in inline height.
Fixed setting breakpoint by address to not require addresses to resolve.
A quick example:
% cat main.cpp
% ./build/Debug/lldb test/stl/a.out
Current executable set to 'test/stl/a.out' (x86_64).
(lldb) breakpoint set --address 0x0000000100000d31
Breakpoint created: 1: address = 0x0000000100000d31, locations = 1
(lldb) r
Launching 'a.out' (x86_64)
(lldb) Process 38031 Stopped
* thread #1: tid = 0x2e03, pc = 0x0000000100000d31, where = a.out`main [inlined] std::string::_M_data() const at /usr/include/c++/4.2.1/bits/basic_string.h:280, stop reason = breakpoint 1.1, queue = com.apple.main-thread
277
278 _CharT*
279 _M_data() const
280 -> { return _M_dataplus._M_p; }
281
282 _CharT*
283 _M_data(_CharT* __p)
(lldb) bt
thread #1: tid = 0x2e03, stop reason = breakpoint 1.1, queue = com.apple.main-thread
frame #0: pc = 0x0000000100000d31, where = a.out`main [inlined] std::string::_M_data() const at /usr/include/c++/4.2.1/bits/basic_string.h:280
frame #1: pc = 0x0000000100000d31, where = a.out`main [inlined] std::string::_M_rep() const at /usr/include/c++/4.2.1/bits/basic_string.h:288
frame #2: pc = 0x0000000100000d31, where = a.out`main [inlined] std::string::size() const at /usr/include/c++/4.2.1/bits/basic_string.h:606
frame #3: pc = 0x0000000100000d31, where = a.out`main [inlined] operator<< <char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> > at /usr/include/c++/4.2.1/bits/basic_string.h:2414
frame #4: pc = 0x0000000100000d31, where = a.out`main + 33 at /Volumes/work/gclayton/Documents/src/lldb/test/stl/main.cpp:14
frame #5: pc = 0x0000000100000d08, where = a.out`start + 52
Each inline frame contains only the variables that they contain and each inlined
stack frame is treated as a single entity.
llvm-svn: 111877
to spawn a thread for each process that is being monitored. Previously
LLDB would spawn a single thread that would wait for any child process which
isn't ok to do as a shared library (LLDB.framework on Mac OSX, or lldb.so on
linux). The old single thread used to call wait4() with a pid of -1 which
could cause it to reap child processes that it shouldn't have.
Re-wrote the way Function blocks are handles. Previously I attempted to keep
all blocks in a single memory allocation (in a std::vector). This made the
code somewhat efficient, but hard to work with. I got rid of the old BlockList
class, and went to a straight parent with children relationship. This new
approach will allow for partial parsing of the blocks within a function.
llvm-svn: 111706
Arrange that this then gets properly set on attach, or when a "file" is set.
Add a completer for "process attach -n".
Caveats: there isn't currently a way to handle multiple processes with the same name. That
will have to wait on a way to pass annotations along with the completion strings.
llvm-svn: 110624
including superclass members. This involved ensuring
that access control was ignored, and ensuring that
the operands of BitCasts were properly scanned for
variables that needed importing.
Also laid the groundwork for declaring objects of
custom types; however, this functionality is disabled
for now because of a potential loop in ASTImporter.
llvm-svn: 110174
involved watching for the objective C built-in types in DWARF and making sure
when we convert the DWARF types into clang types that we use the appropriate
ASTContext types.
Added a way to find and dump types in lldb (something equivalent to gdb's
"ptype" command):
image lookup --type <TYPENAME>
This only works for looking up types by name and won't work with variables.
It also currently dumps out verbose internal information. I will modify it
to dump more appropriate user level info in my next submission.
Hookup up the "FindTypes()" functions in the SymbolFile and SymbolVendor so
we can lookup types by name in one or more images.
Fixed "image lookup --address <ADDRESS>" to be able to correctly show all
symbol context information, but it will only show this extra information when
the new "--verbose" flag is used.
Updated to latest LLVM to get a few needed fixes.
llvm-svn: 110089
lldb_private::Language class into the enumerations header so it can be freely
used by other interfaces.
Added correct objective C class support to the DWARF symbol parser. Prior to
this fix we were parsing objective C classes as C++ classes and now that the
expression parser is ready to call functions we need to make sure the objective
C classes have correct AST types.
llvm-svn: 109574
it returns a list of functions as a SymbolContextList.
Rewrote the clients of SymbolContext to use this
SymbolContextList.
Rewrote some of the providers of the data to SymbolContext
to make them respect preferences as to whether the list
should be cleared first; propagated that change out.
ClangExpressionDeclMap and ClangASTSource use this new
function list to properly generate function definitions -
even for functions that don't have a prototype in the
debug information.
llvm-svn: 109476
I also added new functions to create an Objective C class, ivar and set an objective C superclass. They aren't hooked up in the DWARF parser yet. That is the next step, though I am unsure if I will do this in the DWARF parser or try and do it generically in the existing Record manipulation functions.
llvm-svn: 109130
defines that are in "llvm/Support/MachO.h". This should allow ObjectFileMachO
and ObjectContainerUniversalMachO to be able to be cross compiled in Linux.
Also did some cleanup on the ASTType by renaming it to ClangASTType and
renaming the header file. Moved a lot of "AST * + opaque clang type *"
functionality from lldb_private::Type over into ClangASTType.
llvm-svn: 109046
used by the JIT compiled expression, including the
result of the expression.
Also added a new class, ASTType, which encapsulates an
opaque Clang type and its associated AST context.
Refactored ClangExpressionDeclMap to use ASTTypes,
significantly reducing the possibility of mixups of
types from different AST contexts.
llvm-svn: 108965
enabled LLVM make style building and made this compile LLDB on Mac OS X. We
can now iterate on this to make the build work on both linux and macosx.
llvm-svn: 108009
line table entries that were termination entries (ones that define the bounds
of the previous entry) could be found when looking up line table entries.
We now properly skip these termination entries and check the next entry to
try for a match.
llvm-svn: 107729
- fixed 3 posix spawn attributes leaks
- fixed us always leaking CXXBaseSpecifier objects when we create class
base classes. Clang apparently copies the base classes we pass in.
Fixed some code formatting in ClangASTContext.cpp.
llvm-svn: 107459
Added the ability to read memory from the target's object files when we aren't
running, so disassembling works before you run!
Cleaned up the API to lldb_private::Target::ReadMemory().
Cleaned up the API to the Disassembler to use actual "lldb_private::Address"
objects instead of just an "addr_t". This is nice because the Address objects
when resolved carry along their section and module which can get us the
object file. This allows Target::ReadMemory to be used when we are not
running.
Added a new lldb_private::Address dump style: DumpStyleDetailedSymbolContext
This will show a full breakdown of what an address points to. To see some
sample output, execute a "image lookup --address <addr>".
Fixed SymbolContext::DumpStopContext(...) to not require a live process in
order to be able to print function and symbol offsets.
llvm-svn: 107350
intelligently. The four name types we currently have are:
eFunctionNameTypeFull = (1 << 1), // The function name.
// For C this is the same as just the name of the function
// For C++ this is the demangled version of the mangled name.
// For ObjC this is the full function signature with the + or
// - and the square brackets and the class and selector
eFunctionNameTypeBase = (1 << 2), // The function name only, no namespaces or arguments and no class
// methods or selectors will be searched.
eFunctionNameTypeMethod = (1 << 3), // Find function by method name (C++) with no namespace or arguments
eFunctionNameTypeSelector = (1 << 4) // Find function by selector name (ObjC) names
this allows much more flexibility when setting breakoints:
(lldb) breakpoint set --name main --basename
(lldb) breakpoint set --name main --fullname
(lldb) breakpoint set --name main --method
(lldb) breakpoint set --name main --selector
The default:
(lldb) breakpoint set --name main
will inspect the name "main" and look for any parens, or if the name starts
with "-[" or "+[" and if any are found then a full name search will happen.
Else a basename search will be the default.
Fixed some command option structures so not all options are required when they
shouldn't be.
Cleaned up the breakpoint output summary.
Made the "image lookup --address <addr>" output much more verbose so it shows
all the important symbol context results. Added a GetDescription method to
many of the SymbolContext objects for the more verbose output.
llvm-svn: 107075
ickiness, and is cleaner to boot.
I'm fairly confident that I converted the comparator over properly,
and what testing I could figure out how to run seemed to pass, but it
would be great if someone in the know could check behind me.
llvm-svn: 105834