Currently, when creating a target for a fat binary, we error out if more
than one platforms can support the different architectures in the
binary. There are situations where it makes sense for multiple platforms
to support the same architectures: for example the host and
remote-macosx platform on Darwin.
The only way to currently disambiguate between them is to specify the
architecture. This patch changes that to take into account the selected
and host platform. The new algorithm works a follows:
1. Pick the selected platform if it matches any of the architectures.
2. Pick the host platform if it matches any of the architectures.
3. If there's one platform that works for all architectures, pick that.
If none of the above apply then we either have no platform supporting
the architectures in the fat binary or multiple platforms with no good
way to disambiguate between them.
I've added a bunch of unit tests to codify this new behavior.
rdar://90360204
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122684
Update the response schema of the TraceGetState packet and add
Intel PT specific response structure that contains the TSC conversion,
if it exists. The IntelPTCollector loads the TSC conversion and caches
it to prevent unnecessary calls to perf_event_open. Move the TSC conversion
calculation from Perf.h to TraceIntelPTGDBRemotePackets.h to remove
dependency on Linux specific headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122246
This patch adds a test for b0dc2fae60. That commit fixed a bug where
we could increment the indirect symbol offset every time we parsed the
symbol table.
- Add PerfEvent class to handle creating ring buffers and handle the resources associated with a perf_event
- Refactor IntelPT collection code to use this new API
- Add TSC to timestamp conversion logic with unittest
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121734
- Rename IntelPTManager class and files to IntelPTCollector
- Change GetTimestampCounter API to general trace counter API,
GetCounter
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121711
Report warnings and errors through events instead of printing directly
the to the debugger's error stream. By using events, IDEs such as Xcode
can report these issues in the UI instead of having them show up in the
debugger console.
The new diagnostic events are handled by the default event loop. If a
diagnostic is reported while nobody is listening for the new event
types, it is printed directly to the debugger's error stream.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121511
Add synchronization to the IOHandler to prevent multiple threads from
writing concurrently to the output or error stream.
A scenario where this could happen is when a thread (the default event
thread for example) is using the debugger's asynchronous stream. We
would delegate this operation to the IOHandler which might be running on
another thread. Until this patch there was nothing to synchronize the
two at the IOHandler level.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121500
This reverts commit 242c574dc0 because it
breaks the following tests on the bots:
- TestGuiExpandThreadsTree.py
- TestBreakpointCallbackCommandSource.py
I thought that x86GetSupportedArchitectures would always return
x86_64-apple-macosx as a compatible architecture, regardless of the host
achitecture, but the Debian bot disagrees with that.
Add synchronization to the IOHandler to prevent multiple threads from
writing concurrently to the output or error stream.
A scenario where this could happen is when a thread (the default event
thread for example) is using the debugger's asynchronous stream. We
would delegate this operation to the IOHandler which might be running on
another thread. Until this patch there was nothing to synchronize the
two at the IOHandler level.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121500
This patch is another attempt to fix platform selection on Apple
Silicon. It partially undoes D117340 which tried to fix the issue by
always instantiating a remote-ios platform for "iPhone and iPad Apps on
Apple Silicon Macs".
While the previous patch worked for attaching, it broke launching and
everything else that expects the remote platform to be connected. I made
an attempt to work around that, but quickly found out that there were
just too may places that had this assumption baked in.
This patch takes a different approach and reverts back to marking the
host platform compatible with iOS triples. This brings us back to the
original situation where platform selection was broken for remote iOS
debugging on Apple Silicon. To fix that, we now look at the process'
host architecture to differentiate between iOS binaries running remotely
and iOS binaries running locally.
I tested the following scenarios, which now all uses the desired
platform:
- Launching an iOS binary on macOS: uses the host platform
- Attaching to an iOS binary on macOS: uses the host platform
- Attaching to a remote iOS binary: uses the remote-ios platform
rdar://89840215
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121444
Applied modernize-use-default-member-init clang-tidy check over LLDB.
It appears in many files we had already switched to in class member init but
never updated the constructors to reflect that. This check is already present in
the lldb/.clang-tidy config.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121481
To allow us to select a different platform based on where the process is
running, plumb the process host architecture through platform selection.
This patch is in preparation for D121444 which needs this functionality
to tell apart iOS binaries running on Apple Silicon vs on a remote iOS
device.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121484
We have using namespace llvm::dwarf in dwarf.h header globally. Replacing that
with a using namespace within lldb_private::dwarf and moving to a
using namespace lldb_private::dwarf in .cpp files and fully qualified names
in the few header files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120836
The upstream project ships CMake rules for building vanilla gtest/gmock which conflict with the names chosen by LLVM. Since LLVM's build rules here are quite specific to LLVM, prefixing them to avoid collision is the right thing (i.e. there does not appear to be a path to letting someone *replace* LLVM's googletest with one they bring, so co-existence should be the goal).
This allows LLVM to be included with testing enabled within projects that themselves have a dependency on an official gtest release.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120789
All current callers set the argument to false. monitor_signals=true used
to be used in the Process plugins (which needed to know when the
debugged process gets a signal), but this implementation has several
serious issues, which means that individual process plugins now
orchestrate the monitoring of debugged processes themselves.
This allows us to simplify the implementation (no need to play with
process groups), and the interface (we only catch fatal events, so the
callback is always called just once).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120425
Jim noticed that the regex command is unintentionally recursive. Let's
use the following command regex as an example:
(lldb) com regex humm 's/([^ ]+) ([^ ]+)/p %1 %2 %1 %2/'
If we call it with arguments foo bar, thing behave as expected:
(lldb) humm foo bar
(...)
foo bar foo bar
However, if we include %2 in the arguments, things break down:
(lldb) humm fo%2o bar
(...)
fobaro bar fobaro bar
The problem is that the implementation of the substitution is too naive.
It substitutes the %1 token into the target template in place, then does
the %2 substitution starting with the resultant string. So if the
previous substitution introduced a %2 token, it would get processed in
the second sweep, etc.
This patch addresses the issue by walking the command once and
substituting the % variables in place.
(lldb) humm fo%2o bar
(...)
fo%2o bar fo%2o bar
Furthermore, this patch also reports an error if not enough variables
were provided and add support for substituting %0.
rdar://81236994
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120101
Accept a function object instead of a raw pointer. This avoids a bunch
of boilerplate typically needed to pass arguments to the thread
functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120321
I was looking at Stream::PutRawBytes and thought I spotted a bug because
both loops are using `i < src_len` as the loop condition despite them
iterating in opposite directions.
On closer inspection, the existing code is correct, because it relies on
well-defined unsigned integer wrapping. Correct doesn't mean readable,
so this patch changes the loop condition to compare against 0 when
decrementing i while still covering the edge case of src_len potentially
being 0 itself.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119857
As usual with that header cleanup series, some implicit dependencies now need to
be explicit:
llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFContext.h no longer includes:
- "llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFAcceleratorTable.h"
- "llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFCompileUnit.h"
- "llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFDebugAbbrev.h"
- "llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFDebugAranges.h"
- "llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFDebugFrame.h"
- "llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFDebugLoc.h"
- "llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFDebugMacro.h"
- "llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFGdbIndex.h"
- "llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFSection.h"
- "llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFTypeUnit.h"
- "llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFUnitIndex.h"
Plus llvm/Support/Errc.h not included by a bunch of llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARF*.h files
Preprocessed lines to build llvm on my setup:
after: 1065629059
before: 1066621848
Which is a great diff!
Discourse thread: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119723
Have the different ::Parse.* methods return the demangled string
directly instead of having to go through ::GetBufferRef.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118953
Most of our code was including Log.h even though that is not where the
"lldb" log channel is defined (Log.h defines the generic logging
infrastructure). This worked because Log.h included Logging.h, even
though it should.
After the recent refactor, it became impossible the two files include
each other in this direction (the opposite inclusion is needed), so this
patch removes the workaround that was put in place and cleans up all
files to include the right thing. It also renames the file to LLDBLog to
better reflect its purpose.
Support synthesizing the siginfo_t type from the Platform plugin.
This type is going to be used by LLDB client to process the raw siginfo
data received from lldb-server without the necessity of relying
on target's debug info being present.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117707
Currently, running the test suite with LLVM_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS=On
causes a couple of tests to fail. This happens because they expect a
certain order of variables (all of them happen to use the "target
variable" command, but other lookup functions should suffer from the
same issues), all of which have the same name. Sort algorithms often
preserve the order of equivalent elements (in this case the entries in
the NameToDIE map), but that not guaranteed, and
LLVM_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS stresses that by pre-shuffling all inputs
before sorting.
While this could easily be fixed by relaxing the test expectations,
having a deterministic output seems like a worthwhile goal,
particularly, as this could have bigger consequences than just a
different print order -- in some cases we just pick the first entry that
we find, whatever that is. Therefore this patch makes the sort
deterministic by introducing another sort key -- UniqueCString::Sort
gets a value comparator functor, which can be used to sort elements with
the same name -- in the DWARF case we use DIERef::operator<, which
roughly equals the order in which the entries appear in the debug info,
and matches the current "accidental" order.
Using a extra functor seemed preferable to using stable_sort, as the
latter allocates extra O(n) of temporary memory.
I observed no difference in debug info parsing speed with this patch
applied.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118251
This reverts commit ef82063207.
- It conflicts with the existing llvm::size in STLExtras, which will now
never be called.
- Calling it without llvm:: breaks C++17 compat
The tag map holds a sparse set of memory tags and allows
you to query ranges for tags.
Granules that do not have tags will be set to llvm::None.
to keep the ordering intact. If there are no tags for the
requested range we'll just return an empty result so that
callers don't need to check that all values are llvm::None.
This will be combined with MemoryTagManager's MakeTaggedRanges:
* MakeTaggedRanges
* Read from all those ranges
* Insert the results into the tag map
* Give the tag map to whatever needs to print tags
Which in this case will be "memory read"/DumpDataExtractor.
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112825
This is to be used when you want to know what subranges
of a larger range have memory tagging. Like MakeTaggedRange
but memory without tags is skipped and you get a list of ranges back.
Will be used later by DumpDataExtractor to show memory tags.
MakeTaggedRanges assumes that the memory regions it is
given are sorted in ascending order and do not overlap.
For the current use case where you get regions from
GetMemoryRegions and are on some Linux like OS, this is
reasonable to assume.
I've used asserts to check those conditions. In future
any API binding will check them up front to prevent a crash.
Reviewed By: omjavaid
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112824
This patch makes use of c++ type checking and scoped enums to make
logging statements shorter and harder to misuse.
Defines like LIBLLDB_LOG_PROCESS are replaces with LLDBLog::Process.
Because it now carries type information we do not need to worry about
matching a specific enum value with the right getter function -- the
compiler will now do that for us.
The main entry point for the logging machinery becomes the GetLog
(template) function, which will obtain the correct Log object based on
the enum type. It achieves this through another template function
(LogChannelFor<T>), which must be specialized for each type, and should
return the appropriate channel object.
This patch also removes the ability to log a message if multiple
categories are enabled simultaneously as it was unused and confusing.
This patch does not actually remove any of the existing interfaces. The
defines and log retrieval functions are left around as wrappers around
the new interfaces. They will be removed in follow-up patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117490
This better describes the intent of the method. Which for AArch64
is removing the top byte which includes the memory tags.
It does not include pointer signatures, for those we need to use
the ABI plugin. The rename makes this a little more clear.
It's a bit awkward that the memory tag manager is removing the whole
top byte not just the memory tags but it's an improvement for now.
Reviewed By: omjavaid
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117671
We got a few crash reports that showed LLDB initializing Python on two
separate threads. Make sure Python is initialized exactly once.
rdar://87287005
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117601
This was meant to be a replacement for the lldb-server sub-test suite of
the API tests, but it never got off the ground and it's making the
windows bot flaky.
Deleting it does not reduce test coverage as the original api test is
still around.
Return our PythonObject wrappers instead of raw PyObjects (obfuscated as
void *). This ensures that ownership (reference counts) of python
objects is automatically tracked.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117462
This also removes the corresponding unit tests. I wrote them to sanity
check my original refactoring and checked them in because why not. The
current implementation, without the added complexity of indices, is
simple enough that we can do without it.
Remove the Mangled::operator! and Mangled::operator void* where the
comments in header and implementation files disagree and replace them
with operator bool.
This fix PR52702 as https://reviews.llvm.org/D106837 used the buggy
Mangled::operator! in Symbol::SynthesizeNameIfNeeded. For example,
consider the symbol "puts" in a hello world C program:
// Inside Symbol::SynthesizeNameIfNeeded
(lldb) p m_mangled
(lldb_private::Mangled) $0 = (m_mangled = None, m_demangled = "puts")
(lldb) p !m_mangled
(bool) $1 = true # should be false!!
This leads to Symbol::SynthesizeNameIfNeeded overwriting m_demangled
part of Mangled (in this case "puts").
In conclusion, this patch turns
callq 0x401030 ; symbol stub for: ___lldb_unnamed_symbol36
back into
callq 0x401030 ; symbol stub for: puts .
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116217
This patch add the ability to cache the manual DWARF indexing results to disk for faster subsequent debug sessions. Manual DWARF indexing is time consuming and causes all DWARF to be fully parsed and indexed each time you debug a binary that doesn't have an acceptable accelerator table. Acceptable accelerator tables include .debug_names in DWARF5 or Apple accelerator tables.
This patch breaks up testing by testing all of the encoding and decoding of required C++ objects in a gtest unit test, and then has a test to verify the debug info cache is generated correctly.
This patch also adds the ability to track when a symbol table or DWARF index is loaded or saved to the cache in the "statistics dump" command. This is essential to know in statistics as it can help explain why a debug session was slower or faster than expected.
Reviewed By: labath, wallace
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115951
This starts to fix the other half of the lifetime problems in this code
-- dangling references. SB objects created on the stack will go away
when the function returns, which is a problem if the python code they
were meant for stashes a reference to them somewhere. Most of the time
this goes by unnoticed, as the code rarely has a reason to store these,
but in case it does, we shouldn't respond by crashing.
This patch fixes the management for a couple of SB objects (Debugger,
Frame, Thread). The SB objects are now created on the heap, and
their ownership is immediately passed on to SWIG, which will ensure they
are destroyed when the last python reference goes away. I will handle
the other objects in separate patches.
I include one test which demonstrates the lifetime issue for SBDebugger.
Strictly speaking, one should create a test case for each of these
objects and each of the contexts they are being used. That would require
figuring out how to persist (and later access) each of these objects.
Some of those may involve a lot of hoop-jumping (we can run python code
from within a frame-format string). I don't think that is
necessary/worth it since the new wrapper functions make it very hard to
get this wrong.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115925