@unittest2.expectedFailure("rdar://7796742")
Which was covering up the fact this was failing on linux and hexagon. I added back a decorator so we don't break any build bots.
llvm-svn: 274388
We had support that assumed that thread local data for a variable could be determined solely from the module in which the variable exists. While this work for linux, it doesn't work for Apple OSs. The DWARF for thread local variables consists of location opcodes that do something like:
DW_OP_const8u (x)
DW_OP_form_tls_address
or
DW_OP_const8u (x)
DW_OP_GNU_push_tls_address
The "x" is allowed to be anything that is needed to determine the location of the variable. For Linux "x" is the offset within the TLS data for a given executable (ModuleSP in LLDB). For Apple OS variants, it is the file address of the data structure that contains a pthread key that can be used with pthread_getspecific() and the offset needed.
This fix passes the "x" along to the thread:
virtual lldb::addr_t
lldb_private::Thread::GetThreadLocalData(const lldb::ModuleSP module, lldb::addr_t tls_file_addr);
Then this is passed along to the DynamicLoader::GetThreadLocalData():
virtual lldb::addr_t
lldb_private::DynamicLoader::GetThreadLocalData(const lldb::ModuleSP module, const lldb::ThreadSP thread, lldb::addr_t tls_file_addr);
This allows each DynamicLoader plug-in do the right thing for the current OS.
The DynamicLoaderMacOSXDYLD was modified to be able to grab the pthread key from the data structure that is in memory and call "void *pthread_getspecific(pthread_key_t key)" to get the value of the thread local storage and it caches it per thread since it never changes.
I had to update the test case to access the thread local data before trying to print it as on Apple OS variants, thread locals are not available unless they have been accessed at least one by the current thread.
I also added a new lldb::ValueType named "eValueTypeVariableThreadLocal" so that we can ask SBValue objects for their ValueType and be able to tell when we have a thread local variable.
<rdar://problem/23308080>
llvm-svn: 274366
Summary:
As this test will create a new target, it will cause all following tests
to fail when running in platform mode, if the new target does not match
the existing architecture (for example, x86 vs x86_64).
Reviewers: zturner, spyffe, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21906
llvm-svn: 274364
I overlooked the possibility of certain targets translating increment statement into a read and write.
In this case we replace increment statement with an assignment.
llvm-svn: 274215
Summary:
This removes the last usage of Platform plugins in lldb-server -- it was used for launching child
processes, where it can be trivially replaced by Host::LaunchProces (as lldb-server is always
running on the host).
Removing platform plugins enables us to remove a lot of other unused code, which was pulled in as
a transitive dependency, and it reduces lldb-server size by 4%--9% (depending on build type and
architecture).
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20440
llvm-svn: 274125
Patch by Nitesh Jain.
Summary : The problem appears while linking liblldb.so. The class Address contain atomic variable m_offset. The loading and storing of variable is access via atomic_load_8 and atomic_store_8 functions. Some target fail to implicitly link libatomic, which cause undefine reference to atomic_store_8/atomic_load_8. This patch uses http://reviews.llvm.org/D20896 to check if libatomic need to be explicitly link.
Reviewed by labath.
Differential: D20464
llvm-svn: 274121
A few fixes:
- Check the process state to make sure it is stopped
- Grab the frame from the "exe_ctx" so this will work during breakpoint callbacks
- Print out the SBDeclaration objects of the variables that shadow each other so we can see the source locations of which variable declarations are shodowing each other.
llvm-svn: 273963
Target::Install() was assuming the module at index 0 was the executable.
This is often true, but not guaranteed to be the case. The
TestInferiorChanged.py test highlighted this when run against iOS.
After the binary is replaced in the middle of the test, it becomes the
last module in the list. The rest of the Target::Install() logic then
clobbers the executable file by using whatever happens to be the first
module in the target module list.
This change also marks the TestInferiorChanged.py test as a no-debug-info
test.
llvm-svn: 273960
explicit in how it adds the kernel binary, to guard against the
case where a kernel corefile might incorrectly include the kernel's
UUID in it (so calling ::GetSharedModule may end up returning the
global module cache's copy of the core file instead of adding the
kerenl binary).
<rdar://problem/26988816>
llvm-svn: 273954
We were checking for integer types only before this. So I added the ability for CompilerType objects to check for integer and enum types.
Then I searched for places that were using the CompilerType::IsIntegerType(...) function. Many of these places also wanted to be checking for enumeration types as well, so I have fixed those places. These are in the ABI plug-ins where we are figuring out which arguments would go in where in regisers/stack when making a function call, or determining where the return value would live. The real fix for this is to use clang to compiler a CGFunctionInfo and then modify the code to be able to take the IR and a calling convention and have the backend answer the questions correctly for us so we don't need to create a really bad copy of the ABI in each plug-in, but that is beyond the scope of this bug fix.
Also added a test case to ensure this doesn't regress in the future.
llvm-svn: 273750
This:
a) teaches PythonCallable to look inside a callable object
b) teaches PythonCallable to discover whether a callable method is bound
c) teaches lldb.command to dispatch to either the older 4 argument version or the newer 5 argument version
llvm-svn: 273640
This shows how to grab individual blocks from stack frames and get only the variables from those blocks. It then will iterate over all of the parent blocks and look for shadowed variables.
llvm-svn: 273604
Summary:
This adds new SB API calls and classes to allow a user of the SB API to obtain a full list of memory regions accessible within the process. Adding this to the API makes it possible use the API for tasks like scanning memory for blocks allocated with a header and footer to track down memory leaks, otherwise just inspecting every address is impractical especially for 64 bit processes.
These changes only add the API itself and a base implementation of GetMemoryRegions() to lldb_private::Process::GetMemoryRegions.
I will submit separate patches to fill in lldb_private::Process::GetMemoryRegionInfoList and GetMemoryRegionInfo for individual platforms.
The original discussion about this is here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2016-May/010203.html
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20565
llvm-svn: 273547
for TestNamespaceLookup.py; didn't see anything obviously wrong so I'll
need to look at this more closely before re-committing. (passed OK on
macOS ;)
llvm-svn: 273531
There's uses of "macosx" that will be more tricky to
change, like in triples (e.g. "x86_64-apple-macosx10.11") -
for now I'm just updating source comments and strings printed
for humans.
llvm-svn: 273524
This change adds a new Xcode variable, LLDB_ENABLE_COVERAGE.
If set to 1, then the Xcode build will produce a clang
coverage-style build of LLDB. This can be done with a commandline
invocation such as:
xcodebuild -scheme desktop -configuration Debug build LLDB_ENABLE_COVERAGE=1
Alternatively, the variable can be locally modified from within Xcode
and built with the Xcode IDE.
llvm-svn: 273332
In Address.cpp, we were asking for the lldb::eSymbolContextVariable to be resolved, yet we weren't using the variable. This code gets called when disassembling and can cause the manual creation of all global variables variables which can take minutes. Removing eSymbolContextVariable allows disassembly to not create these long pauses.
In Module.cpp, if someone only specified the lldb::eSymbolContextVariable flag, we would not look into a module's debug info, now we will.
<rdar://problem/26907449>
llvm-svn: 273307
which doesn't like against all the extra UI frameworks on ios)
so it now generates a binary called "debugserver-nonui" and puts
it in /usr/local/bin instead of /Developer/usr/bin.
Add some cruft to RNBDefs.h to get the version number (provided
by Xcode at build time) with either the name "debugserver" or
"debugserver_nonui" as appropriate.
Add the "debugserver-mini" target to the top level "ios" target
in lldb xcode project file, so this nonui debugserver will be
built along with the normal lldb / debugserver.
<rdar://problem/24730789>
llvm-svn: 273236
This patch allows LLDB for AArch64 to watch all bytes, words or double words individually on non 8-byte alligned addresses.
This patch also adds tests to verify this functionality.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21280
llvm-svn: 272916
Not sure what changed, but something outside our code
is failing one of the EditLine gtests on OS X CI (and
locally) before the gtest ever gets to run. This fails
the first EditLine gtest.
This change exports the TERM as "vt100" before running
the lldb-gtest binary, fixing the issue.
llvm-svn: 272844
During expression evaluation, the ClangExpressionParser preforms a
number of hard-coded fixups on the expression's IR before the module
is assembled and dispatched to be run in a ThreadPlan.
This patch allows the runtimes to register LLVM passes to be run over the
generated IR, that they may perform language or architecture-specfic fixups
or analyses over the generated expression.
This makes expression evaluation for plugins more flexible and allows
language-specific fixes to reside in their own module, rather than
littering the expression evaluator itself with language-specific fixes.
llvm-svn: 272800
Summary:
This removes the last usage of the Platform plugin in NPL. It was being
used for determining the architecture of the debugged process. I replace
the call that went through the Platform plugin with a lower level call
on the ObjectFile directly.
Reviewers: tberghammer
Subscribers: uweigand, nitesh.jain, omjavaid, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21324
llvm-svn: 272686
This patch fixes various races between the time the private state thread is signaled to exit and the time it actually exits (during which it no longer responds to events). Previously, this was consistently causing 2-second timeout delays on process detach/stop for us.
This also prevents crashes that were caused by the thread controlling its own owning pointer while the controller was using it (copying the thread wrapper is not enough to mitigate this, since the internal thread object was getting reset anyway). Again, we were seeing this consistently.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21296
llvm-svn: 272682
PlatformRemoteAppleTV to check the target.exec-search-paths
directories for files after looking in the SDK. An additional
wrinkle is that the remote file path may be something like
".../UIFoundation.framework/UIFoundation" and in
target.exec-search-paths we will have "UIFoundation.framework".
Looking for just the filename of the path is not sufficient -
we need to also look for it by the parent directories because
this may be a darwin bundle/framework like the UIFoundation
example.
We really need to make a PlatformRemoteAppleDevice and have
PlatformRemoteiOS, PlatformRemoteAppleWatch, and PlatformRemoteAppleTV
inherit from it. These three classes are 98% identical code.
<rdar://problem/25976619>
llvm-svn: 272635
Prior to this we would display the typename for "TestObj<-1>" as "TestObj<4294967295>" when we showed the type. Expression parsing could also fail because we would fail to find the mangled name when evaluating expressions.
The issue was we were losing the signed'ness of the template integer parameter in DWARFASTParserClang.cpp.
<rdar://problem/25577041>
llvm-svn: 272434
For some reason, the conversion to taking the target lock when acquiring
the ExecutionContext was only done for some of the functions here. That was
allowing lock inversion in some complex uses.
<rdar://problem/26705635>
llvm-svn: 272354
For code like:
int g_global = 234;
int g_static = 345;
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
int a = 22333;
static int g_int = 123;
return g_global + g_static + g_int + a;
}
If we stop at the "return" statement, we expect to see "argc", "argv", "a" and "g_int" when we type "frame variable" since "g_int" is a locally defined static variable, but we don't expect to see "g_global" or "g_static" unless we add the -g option to "frame variable".
llvm-svn: 272348
This enables a couple of tests which have been shown to run reliably on the
linux x86 buildbot. If you see a failure after this commit, feel free to add
the xfail back, but please make it as specific as possible (i.e., try to make
it not cover i386/x86_64 with clang-3.5, clang-3.9 or gcc-4.9).
llvm-svn: 272326
Address Size File off File size
---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
LC_SEGMENT 0x000f6000 0x00001000 0x1d509ee8 0x00001000 --- --- 0 0x00000000 __TEXT
LC_SEGMENT 0x0f600000 0x00100000 0x1d50aee8 0x00100000 --- --- 0 0x00000000 __TEXT
LC_SEGMENT 0x000f7000 0x00001000 0x1d60aee8 0x00001000 --- --- 0 0x00000000 __TEXT
Any if the user executes the following command:
(lldb) mem read 0xf6ff0
We would attempt to read 32 bytes from 0xf6ff0 but would only get 16 unless we loop through consecutive memory ranges that are contiguous in the address space, but not in the file data.
This fixes the ProcessMachCore::DoReadMemory() to do the right thing.
<rdar://problem/19729287>
llvm-svn: 272322
Previously we eliminated the randomized scheme for finding memory when the
underlying process cannot allocate memory, and replaced it with an algorithm
that starts the allocations at 00x.
This was more determinstic, but runs into problems on embedded targets where the
pages near 0x0 are in fact interesting memory. To deal with those cases, this
patch does two things:
- It makes the default fallback be an address that is less likely than 0x0 to
contain interesting information.
- Before falling back to this, it adds an algorithm that consults the
GetMemoryRegionInfo() API to see if it can find an unmapped area.
This should eliminate the randomness (and unpredictable memory accesseas) of the
previous scheme while making expressions more likely to return correct results.
<rdar://problem/25545573>
llvm-svn: 272301
In order to make this happen, I have added permissions to sections so that we can know what the permissions are for a given section, and modified both core file plug-ins to override Process::GetMemoryRegionInfo() and answer things correctly.
llvm-svn: 272276
IsPointedCString has problems with ValueObjects of type eTypeHostAddress. We should
figure out the right thing to do in that case, but the test is silly here because we're
reading a type we've defined, so we know it is a const char *, and if the memory is good,
we won't be able to read any characters, when we do ReadPointedString.
<rdar://problem/26612812>
llvm-svn: 272087
Rules are as follows for internal code using lldb::DisassemblerSP and lldb::InstructionSP:
1 - The disassembler needs to stay around as long as instructions do as the Instruction subclass now has a weak pointer to the disassembler
2 - The public API has been fixed so that if you get a SBInstruction, it will hold onto a strong reference to the disassembler in a new InstructionImpl class
This will keep code like like:
inst = lldb.target.ReadInstructions(frame.GetPCAddress(), 1).GetInstructionAtIndex(0)
inst.GetMnemonic()
Working as expected (not the SBInstructionList() that was returned by SBTarget.ReadInstructions() is gone, but "inst" has a strong reference inside of it to the disassembler and the instruction.
All code inside the LLDB shared library was verified to correctly hold onto the disassembler instance in all places.
<rdar://problem/24585496>
llvm-svn: 272069
Summary:
In the case of client sockets, we are not binding to a specific port, so we
should be able to just request a new one. Disregarding refactors, this code
has been here since the initial LLDB checkin, so I was unable to figure out
whether it was added as a fix for a specific problem, or just for symmetry
with server sockets, but I see no side-effect from removing it now. I was
still able to create 10000 connections within a couple of seconds, so I think
it's unlikely we will exhaust the port space (previously, I would get an
error after a couple thousand connections).
This fixes an occasional issue with connecting to the android debug bridge
deamon on OSX when running the test suite, which would occasionaly fail with
EADDRINUSE. My best guess is that this was happening because two processes
were assigned the same client port number, and then things blew up because
they were both trying to connect to the same ADB server port. I have not
observed this issue happening on Linux or Windows.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21088
llvm-svn: 272041
When USE_SETUPTERM_WORKAROUND is enabled, we were calling setupterm() multiple times and leaking memory on each subsequent call. This is now fixed by calling setupterm() once in the constructor and tracking if we have already setup a terminal for a file descriptor.
Calls to "el_set (m_editline, EL_ADDFN, ..." were leaking memory. If we switch over to call el_wset with wide strings when LLDB_EDITLINE_USE_WCHAR is set, then we no longer leak memory each time we construct a new Editline object.
The calls to "el_set (m_editline, EL_ADDFN, ..." were changed over to call "el_wset (m_editline, EL_ADDFN, ...". Note that when LLDB_EDITLINE_USE_WCHAR is not defined, then el_wset is #define'ed to el_set. All strings are wrapped in EditLineConstString which will use wide strings when needed, and normal C strings when LLDB_EDITLINE_USE_WCHAR is not defined.
<rdar://problem/26677627>
llvm-svn: 272036
If a lldbinline test's source file changed language, then the Makefile wasn't
updated. This was a problem if the Makefile was checked into the repository.
Now lldbinline.py always regenerates the Makefile and asserts if the
newly-generated version is not the same as the one already there. This ensures
that the repository will never be out of date without a buildbot failing.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D21032
llvm-svn: 272024
as an asynchronous unwind plan source.
Two small fixes to the compact unwind dumper tool for
armv7 encodings.
A change to DWARFCallFrameInfo to strip the 0th bit on
addresses in eh_frame sections when armv7. In the
clang generated examples I have, the 0th bit is set for
thumb functions and that's causing the unwinder to pick
the wrong function for eh_frame info.
llvm-svn: 271970
Summary:
Because PIE executables have an e_type of llvm::ELF::ET_DYN,
they are not of type eTypeExecutable, and were being removed
when svr4 packets were used.
Reviewers: clayborg, ADodds, tfiala, sas
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20990
llvm-svn: 271899
return NULL for an invalid register.
The unwind logic asks for the "return address register" which doesn't exist
on x86/x86_64, returns -1 and calls this with -1 as a parameter, ends up
out of scope of the array bounds for g_register_infos and later SIGSEGVs
on accessing. This now matches the other GetRegisterInfoAtIndex for
other platforms.
llvm-svn: 271876
Summary:
Without this commit, when `log enable lldb expr` is enabled, the
disassembly of JIT'ed code is never displayed.
Reviewers: spyffe, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20312
llvm-svn: 271863
Some compilers do not mark up C++ functions as extern "C" in the DWARF, so LLDB
has to fall back (if it is about to give up finding a symbol) to using the base
name of the function.
This fix also ensures that we search by full name rather than "auto," which
could cause unrelated C++ names to be found. Finally, it adds a test case.
<rdar://problem/25094302>
llvm-svn: 271551
Summary: Fix missing return after checking that m_backend is not a pointer or reference type.
Reviewers: clayborg, tberghammer
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20875
llvm-svn: 271453
For Thread Sanitizer reports, LLDB tries to find a global variable declaration
corresponding to the racy address in order to provide a filename and line
number. This commit changes the lookup of the variable to use the mangled
name for lookup and fall back to the demangled version if unavailable. This
is needed to report locations of races on Swift global variables.
I've also added a test to make sure we look up C++ globals correctly.
rdar://problem/26459401
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20760
llvm-svn: 271433
We need to verify that consecutive bitfields have higher offsets and don't overlap. The issues was found by running a broken version of recent clangs where the bitfield offsets were being emitted incorrectly. To guard against this we now verify and toss out any invalid bitfields and print a message that indicates to file a bug against the compiler.
<rdar://problem/25737621>
llvm-svn: 271343
This change implements dumping the executable, triple,
args and environment when using ProcessInfo::Dump().
It also tweaks the way Args::Dump() works so that it prints
a configurable label rather than argv[{index}]={value}. By
default it behaves the same, but if the Dump() method with
the additional arg is provided, it can be overridden. The
environment variables dumped as part of ProcessInfo::Dump()
make use of that.
lldb-server has been modified to dump the gdb-remote stub's
ProcessInfo before launching if the "gdb-remote process" channel
is logged.
llvm-svn: 271312
"ClearDIEs()" was being called too soon, before everyone was done using the DIEs.
This fix delays the calls to ::ClearDIEs() until all compile units have been indexed.
1 - Call "::ExtractDIEsIfNeeded()" on all compile units on separate threads. See if each CU has the DIEs parsed and remember this.
2 - Index all compile units on separate threads.
3 - Clear any DIEs in any compile units that didn't have their DIEs parsed after all compile units have been indexed.
Patch by phlav
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20738
llvm-svn: 271209
r259714 introduces the transport method into the
URL passed to the gdb-remote stub. On debugserver,
this is not supported and prevented debugserver from
being launched by lldb-server in platform mode.
This change skips the transport method addition from
r259714 when on Apple hosts.
llvm-svn: 270961
I was investigating an odd crash in lldb when the breakpoint site
goes to bump the hit counts of the locations it implements. I noticed
that the BreakpointLocationCollection wasn't locking itself for access and
modification. I don't see how that can cause the crash I'm seeing, but still
this is the right thing to do...
<rdar://problem/25178205>
llvm-svn: 270939
We have seen cases where we have been unable to find an argument type for a function, or we find one from another language, and then we try to create a function type by calling:
lldb_private::ClangASTContext::CreateFunctionType(clang::ASTContext*, lldb_private::CompilerType const&, lldb_private::CompilerType const*, unsigned int, bool, unsigned int)
This fix will ensure that all arguments to lldb_private::ClangASTContext::CreateFunctionType() are in order by checking:
- AST is valid
- if arguments are specified we have a valid argument array
- return type is valid
- return type is a clang type
- all argument types are valid
- all argument types are clang types
If any of these fail, we return an invalid CompilerType. If we don't return an invalid type, clang will crash anyway, and LLDB must not crash even in the presence of bad or missing debug info.
<rdar://problem/25172715>
llvm-svn: 270932
ClangASTContext::StartTagDeclarationDefinition(...) was starting definitions for any TagType instances that have TagDecl, but ClangASTContext::CompleteTagDeclarationDefinition(...) was getting the type to a CXXRecordDecl with:
clang::CXXRecordDecl *cxx_record_decl = qual_type->getAsCXXRecordDecl();
The problem is that getAsCXXRecordDecl() might dig a bit deeper into a type and dig out a different decl, which means we might call ClangASTContext::StartTagDeclarationDefinition(...), but it might not do anything, and then we might call ClangASTContext::CompleteTagDeclarationDefinition(...) and it might try to complete something that didn't have its definition started and this will crash.
This change fixes that, and also makes sure that starting a definition succeeds before any calls to ClangASTContext::CompleteTagDeclarationDefinition().
<rdar://problem/24091798>
llvm-svn: 270891
If users call "static void lldb::SBDebugger::Terminate()" we will clean up the debugger list, and users can individually destroy debugger instances with "static void lldb::SBDebugger::Destroy(SBDebugger &)". But if we let the C++ destructor chain tear down this list, other threads that might still be running as the main thread exits can now crash if they access the debugger list. We stop this by leaking the debugger list and its mutex.
<rdar://problem/26372169>
llvm-svn: 270869
Summary:
One can still use the LLVM variables to control this: LLVM_ENABLE_EH, LLVM_ENABLE_RTTI. It's not
clear to me why one would want to control these at lldb level and it's generally not even a good
idea to compile parts of the same binary with different values of these flags.
Reviewers: zturner, tfiala
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20673
llvm-svn: 270863
Summary:
Recent increase in the usage of std::weak_ptr has caused us to rediscover an issue in libstdc++
versions prior to 4.9 <https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=59656>, which make this class
unusable without exceptions in the presence of multiple threads. It's virtualy impossible to work
around this issue without implementing our own shared_ptr/weak_ptr substitutes, which does not
seem like a good idea.
Therefore, I am adding a big CMake warning which warns you about this issue if you're attempting
a to do a build which is suceptible to this problem and suggests possible alternatives. Right
now, nothing spectacular will happen if you ignore this warning (all the crashes I have seen
occur during process shutdown), but there's no guarantee the situation will not change in the
future.
Reviewers: tberghammer, tfiala, nitesh.jain, omjavaid, emaste, krytarowski
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20671
llvm-svn: 270854
This change adds the capability of building test inferiors
with the -gmodules flag to enable module debug info support.
Windows is excluded per @zturner.
Reviewers: granata.enrico, aprantl, zturner, labath
Subscribers: zturner, labath, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19998
llvm-svn: 270848
Summary:
This adds the ability to customize the debugserver codesign process via cmake cache variable. The
user can set the codesign indentity (with the default being the customary lldb_codesign), and if
the identity is set to a empty string, the codesign step is skipped completely.
We needed the last feature to enable building lldb on buildservers which do not have the right
certificates installed.
Reviewers: sas, tberghammer
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20623
llvm-svn: 270832
Summary:
using stdio in tests does not work on windows, and it is not completely reliable on linux.
Avoid using stdio in this test, as it is not necessary for this purpose.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, zturner
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20567
llvm-svn: 270831
which looks for binaries missing an LC_FUNCTION_STARTS section because
it was stripped/not emitted. If we see a normal user process binary
(executable, dylib, framework, bundle) without LC_FUNCTION_STARTS, that
is unusual and we should disallow instruction emulation because that
binary has likely been stripped a lot.
If this is a non-user process binary -- a kernel, a standalone bare-board
binary, a kernel extension (kext) -- and there is no LC_FUNCTION_STARTS,
we should not assume anything about the binary and allow instruction
emulation as we would normally do.
<rdar://problem/26453952>
llvm-svn: 270818
uint32_t SBProcess::GetNumQueues();
SBQueue SBProcess::GetQueueAtIndex (size_t index);
Otherwise this code will run when the process is running and cause problems.
<rdar://problem/26482744>
llvm-svn: 270803
T x;
U y;
doing
x = *((T*)y)
is undefined behavior, even if sizeof(T) == sizeof(U), due to pointer aliasing rules
Fix up a couple of places in LLDB that were doing this, and transform them into a defined and safe memcpy() operation
Also, add a test case to ensure we didn't regress by doing this w.r.t. tagged pointer NSDate instances
llvm-svn: 270793
TestBSDArchives.py and TestWatchLocation.py fail due to unicode error and bug has already been reported for arm and macOSx.
TestConstVariables.py fails because lldb cant figure out frame variable type when used in expr.
llvm-svn: 270780
TestCallUserAnonTypedef.py and TestIRInterpreter.py fail to limitation of JIT expressions in handling hard float ABI targets.
TestBSDArchives.py fails due to python unicode error.
TestBuiltinTrap.py fails due to wrong line information generated by some gcc versions.
llvm-svn: 270745
systems (ios, tvos, watchos). It's a simple format to use now that
I have i386/x86_64 supported already.
The unwind instructions are only valid at call sites -- that is,
when lldb is unwinding a frame in the middle of the stack. It
cannot be used for the currently executing frame; it has no information
about prologues/epilogues/etc.
<rdar://problem/12062336>
llvm-svn: 270658
missing an LC_FUNCTION_STARTS section, we assume it has been
aggressively stripped (it is *very* unusual for anyone to strip
LC_FUNCTION_STARTS) so we disable assembly instruction unwind plan
creation.
Kernel extensions (kexts) don't have LC_FUNCTION_STARTS, but we
almost always have good symbol bounds just with the linker symbols.
So add an exception to allow assembly instruction unwind plan
creation for kexts even though they lack LC_FUNCTION_STARTS.
<rdar://problem/26453952>
llvm-svn: 270618
What with all sorts of folks (TSAN, ASAN, queue detection, etc...) trying to
gather info by calling functions down in the lower layers of lldb, we've started
to see people running expressions simultaneously. The expression evaluation part
is okay, but only one RunThreadPlan can be active at a time. I added a lock to
enforce that.
<rdar://problem/26431072>
llvm-svn: 270593
Summary:
The StringExtractor functions using stroull will already
skip leading whitespace (ie GetU64). Make sure that the manual
hex parsing functions also skip leading whitespace.
This is important for members of the gdb protocol which are defined
as using whitespace separators (ie qfThreadInfo, qC, etc). While
lldb-server does not use the whitespace separators, gdb-remotes
should work if they do, as the whitespace is defined by the gdb-remote
protocol.
Reviewers: vharron, jasonmolenda, clayborg
Subscribers: sas, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20509
llvm-svn: 270592
some (I'm not sure why only some, actually) implementations of std::map require the value type to
be a fully specified type when declaring then. This make sure TypeAndOrName is.
llvm-svn: 270570
Patch by Nitesh Jain.
Summary: These patch fix thread step-out for hard and soft float.
Reviewers: jaydeep, bhushan, clayborg
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20416
llvm-svn: 270564
One of the things slowing us down is that ItaniumABILanguageRuntime class doesn't cache vtable to types in a map. This causes us, on every step, for every variable, to read the first pointer in a C++ type that could be dynamic and lookup the symbol, possibly in every symbol file (some symbols files on Darwin can end up having thousands of .o files when using DWARF in .o files, so thousands of .o files are searched each time).
This fix caches lldb_private::Address (the resolved vtable symbol address in section + offset format) to TypeAndOrName instances inside the one ItaniumABILanguageRuntime in a process. This allows caching of dynamic types and stops us from always doing deep searches in each file.
<rdar://problem/18890778>
llvm-svn: 270488
m_decl_objects is problematic because it assumes that each VarDecl has a unique
variable associated with it. This is not the case in inline contexts.
Also the information in this map can be reconstructed very easily without
maintaining the map. The rest of the testsuite passes with this cange, and I've
added a testcase covering the inline contexts affected by this.
<rdar://problem/26278502>
llvm-svn: 270474
There is flakiness somewhere in the core infrastructure on Windows,
so to get the buildbot reliably green we need to mark all tests
as flaky.
llvm-svn: 270460
On Darwin if a mmap file is code signed and the code signature is invalid, it used to crash. If we specify the MAP_RESILIENT_CODESIGN mmap flag when mapping a file for reading, we can avoid crashing.
Another mmap flag named MAP_RESILIENT_MEDIA allows us to survive if we mmap files that are on removable media like network servers or removable hard drives. If a file was mapped and later the media that had the file became unavailable, we would crash when we would touch the next page that wasn't paged in. Now it will return zeroes and stop of from us from crashing.
<rdar://problem/25918698>
llvm-svn: 270254
The CL causes a build breakage on platforms where sizeof(double) == sizeof(long double)
and it incorrectly assumes that sizeof(double) and sizeof(long double) is the same
on the host and the target.
llvm-svn: 270214
Patch by Nitesh Jain.
Summary: Currently floating point regsiters has eEncodingUint encoding. Hence register write '1.25' will failed. This patch add eEncodingIEEE754 encoding for floating point registers( - ). This patch will fix test_fp_register_write in TestRegisters.py
Reviewers: clayborg, sagar
Subscribers: mohit.bhakkad, jaydeep, bhushan, sdardis, lldb-commits
Differential: D18853
llvm-svn: 270208
In the android-arm ndk there is a duplicated typedef in link.h
and in unwind.h causing build erros. This CL introduces a HACK
to prevent LLVM from finding unwind.h to fix the issue.
llvm-svn: 270201
values for the pc or return address register.
On ios with arm64 and a binary that has multiple functions without
individual symbol boundaries, we end up with an assembly profile
unwind plan that says lr=<same> - that is, the link register contents
are unmodified from the caller's value. This gets the unwinder in
a loop.
When we're off the 0th frame, we never want to look to a caller for
a pc or return-address register value.
Add checks to ReadGPRValue and ReadRegister to prevent both the pc
and ra register values from recursing.
If this causes problems with backtraces on android, let me know or
back it out and I'll look into it -- but I think these are
straightforward and don't expect problems.
<rdar://problem/24610365>
llvm-svn: 270162
Summary: One of the cases handled by ValueObjectChild::UpdateValue() uses the entire width of the parent's scalar value as the size of the child, and extracts the child by calling Scalar::ExtractBitfield(). This seems valid but APInt::trunc(), APInt::sext() and APInt::zext() assert that the bit field must not have the same size as the parent scalar. Replacing those calls with sextOrTrunc(), zextOrTrunc(), sextOrSelf() and zextOrSelf() fixes the assertion failures.
Reviewers: uweigand, labath
Subscribers: labath, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20355
llvm-svn: 270062
The error was not getting propagated to the caller, so the higher layers thought the breakpoint
was successfully set & resolved.
I added a testcase, but it assumes 0x0 is not a valid place to set a breakpoint. On most systems
that is true, but if it isn't true of your system, either find another good place and add it to the
test, or x-fail the test.
<rdar://problem/26345962>
llvm-svn: 270014
The __ENVIRONMENT_MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED macro is only defined on OS X, so the check as written compiled the code out for iOS
The right thing to do is compile the code out for older OSX versions, but leave iOS alone
rdar://26333564
llvm-svn: 270004
TestTopLevelExprs fails on arm and aarch64 linux similar to behaviour on android.
A bug exists here: llvm.org/pr27787.
This patch marks xfail on arm and aarch64.
llvm-svn: 269980
This is a pretty straightforward first pass over removing a number of uses of
Mutex in favor of std::mutex or std::recursive_mutex. The problem is that there
are interfaces which take Mutex::Locker & to lock internal locks. This patch
cleans up most of the easy cases. The only non-trivial change is in
CommandObjectTarget.cpp where a Mutex::Locker was split into two.
llvm-svn: 269877
TestWatchLocation.py fails on arm-linux target due to unicode error in lldb testsuite.
This is a known issue and same test fails on OS X with similar reason.
I have reported a bug and marked this test as xfail for arm-linux targets.
llvm-svn: 269860
On OS X systems, look for /Applications/CMake.app and ~/Applications/CMake.app
versions of the cmake command line binary when trying harder to find a cmake not
on the system path.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20303
llvm-svn: 269713
Both of above tests fail on arm and bugs have been reported on android already.
Adding arm-linux decorator because android decorator doesnt xfail these test when run on linux.
llvm-svn: 269647
NPL now assumes it is running from a single thread now, so its thread-safety is untested
anyway (and if that assumption is broken, we'll have bigger problems (due to ptrace restrictions)
than a couple of missing mutexes).
llvm-svn: 269640
The variables referenced in the print message are not defined. Simply state
that the requisite script is not found. Correct grammar to indicate that the
tests are rather likely to fail rather than unlikely to fail.
llvm-svn: 269628
The parameter here is a list, not a string. Ensure that the we splat the list
into arguments prior to invoke os.path.join. This would previously fail with a
`startswith` is not a member of `list`.
llvm-svn: 269627
This is a fix due to the addition of the new DiagnosticSeverity in
LLVMContext.h. This may warrant a change in name to be LLDB specific
but I leave that to the LLDB experts to refactor.
llvm-svn: 269562
Summary:
print build errors nicely in test output
This test infrastructure change adds a new Python exception
for test subject builds that fail. The output of the build
command is captured and propagated to both the textual test
output display code and to the test event system.
The ResultsFormatter objects have been modified to do something
more useful with this information. The xUnit formatter
now replaces the non-informative Python build error stacktrace
with the build error content. The curses ResultsFormatter
prints a 'B' for build errors rather than 'E'.
The xUnit output, in particular, makes it much easier for
developers to track down test subject build errors that cause
test failures when reports come in from CI.
Reviewers: granata.enrico
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20252
llvm-svn: 269525
Summary:
This change enhances the LLDB test infrastructure to convert
load-time exceptions in a given Python test module into errors.
Before this change, specifying a non-existent test decorator,
or otherwise having some load-time error in a python test module,
would not get flagged as an error.
With this change, typos and other load-time errors in a python
test file get converted to errors and reported by the
test runner.
This change also includes test infrastructure tests that include
covering the new work here. I'm going to wait until we have
these infrastructure tests runnable on the main platforms before
I try to work that into all the normal testing workflows.
The test infrastructure tests can be run by using the standard python module testing practice of doing the following:
cd packages/Python/lldbsuite/test_event
python -m unittest discover -s test/src -p 'Test*.py'
Those tests run the dotest inferior with a known broken test and verify that the errors are caught. These tests did not pass until I modified dotest.py to capture them properly.
@zturner, if you have the chance, if you could try those steps above (the python -m unittest ... line) on Windows, that would be great if we can address any python2/3/Windows bits there. I don't think there's anything fancy, but I didn't want to hook it into test flow until I know it works there.
I'll be slowly adding more tests that cover some of the other breakage I've occasionally seen that didn't get collected as part of the summarization. This is the biggest one I'm aware of.
Reviewers: zturner, labath
Subscribers: zturner, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20193
llvm-svn: 269489
Remove XFAIL from some tests that now pass.
Add XFAIL to some tests that now fail.
Fix a crasher where a null pointer check isn't guarded.
Properly handle all types of errors in SymbolFilePDB.
llvm-svn: 269454
Summary:
The AST contexts are not needed in the server components, and the clang context in particular
pulls in large parts of clang into the binary. Simply removing these two calls reduces the
lldb-server size by about 50%--80%, depending on the architecture and build type.
This should not impact the client parts as the same calls are already present in
SystemInitializerFull.
Reviewers: tberghammer, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20236
llvm-svn: 269416
Patch by Nitesh Jain.
Summary: These patch will set clang::TargetOptions::ABI and accordingly code will be generated for MIPS target.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, jaydeep, bhushan
Differential: D18638
llvm-svn: 269407
The main issues were:
- Listeners recently were converted over to used by getting a shared pointer to a listener. And when they listened to broadcasters they would get a strong reference added to them meaning the listeners would never go away. This caused memory usage to increase and would cause performance issue if many steps were done.
- The lldb_private::Process private state thread had an issue where if a "stop" contol signal was attempted to be sent to that thread, it could end up not responding in 2 seconds and end up getting cancelled which might cause us to cancel a thread that had a mutex locked and it would deadlock the test.
This change makes broadcasters hold onto weak references to listeners. It also fixes some bad threading code that had races inside of it by making the m_events_mutex be non-recursive and getting rid of fragile use of a Predicate<bool> to say that new events are available, and replacing it with using the m_events_mutex with a new m_events_condition to control access to the events in a safer way.
The private state thread now uses a safer way to communicate that the control event has been received by the private state thread: it makes a EventDataReceipt instance that it attaches to the event that sends the control to the private state thread and used this to synchronize the fact that the private state thread has received the event instead of using a Predicate<bool> to convey the info. When the signal event is received, it will pull the event off of the queue in the private state thread and cause the EventData::DoOnRemoval() to be called, which will signal that the event has been received. This cleans up the signal delivery notification so it doesn't rely on a member variable of the process class to convey the info.
std::shared_ptr<EventDataReceipt> event_receipt_sp(new EventDataReceipt());
m_private_state_control_broadcaster.BroadcastEvent(signal, event_receipt_sp);
<rdar://problem/26256353> Listeners are being kept around longer than they should be due to recent changs
<rdar://problem/26256258> Private process state thread can be cancelled and cause deadlocks in test suite
llvm-svn: 269377
The adding of <atomic> to test_common.h broke 12 tests on Darwin. We work around this by not including <atomic> when building on darwin for libstdc++ tests.
llvm-svn: 269372
This allows expressions such as 'i == 1 || i == 2` to be executed using the IR interpreter, instead of relying on JIT code injection (which may not be available on some platforms).
Patch by cameron314
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19124
llvm-svn: 269340
Summary:
MonitorDebugServerProcess went to a lot of effort to make sure its asynchronous invocation does
not cause any mischief, but it was still not race-free. Specifically, in a quick stop-restart
sequence (like the one in TestAddressBreakpoints) the copying of the process shared pointer via
target_sp->GetProcessSP() was racing with the resetting of the pointer in DeleteCurrentProcess,
as they were both accessing the same shared_ptr object.
To avoid this, I simply pass in a weak_ptr to the process when the callback is created. Locking
this pointer is race-free as they are two separate object even though they point to the same
process instance. This also removes the need for the complicated tap-dance around retrieving the
process pointer.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20107
llvm-svn: 269281
Summary:
The "file" variable in a LineEntry was mapped using target.source-map, except when stepping through inlined code. This patch adds a new variable to LineEntry, "original_file", that contains the original file from the debug info. "file" will continue to (possibly) be mapped.
Some code has been changed to use "original_file". This is code dealing with symbols. Code dealing with source files will still use "file". Reviewers, please confirm that these particular changes are correct.
Tests run on Ubuntu 12.04 show no regression.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20135
llvm-svn: 269250
Summary:
This replaces the C-style "void *" baton of the child process monitoring functions with a more
C++-like API taking a std::function. The motivation for this was that it was very difficult to
handle the ownership of the object passed into the callback function -- each caller ended up
implementing his own way of doing it, some doing it better than others. With the new API, one can
just pass a smart pointer into the callback and all of the lifetime management will be handled
automatically.
This has enabled me to simplify the rather complicated handshake in Host::RunShellCommand. I have
left handling of MonitorDebugServerProcess (my original motivation for this change) to a separate
commit to reduce the scope of this change.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner, emaste, krytarowski
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20106
llvm-svn: 269205
Some watchpoint tests fail on aarch64-linux as it lacks support for intalling watchpoints which are not alligned at 8bytes boundary.
Marking them as xfail for now.
llvm-svn: 269187
Patch by Nitesh Jain.
Summary: The ArchSpec::m_flags will be set based on ELF flag ABI.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, jaydeep, bhushan
Differential: D18858
llvm-svn: 269181
Summary:
test_listener_event_process_state checks for Threads
and Frames in the multithreaded_queue. The listener_func has
more computational load, which may be latter executed than the
pop leading to the failure. This patch tries to only check for
frames in listener_func as presence of frames also confirms
prescence of threads and avoids the second push into the
multithreaded_queue.
Reviewers: lldb-commits, clayborg, labath
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20091
llvm-svn: 269168
Test uses x1 in breakpoint expression while objdump shows that x1 is never used in the code and may have random values.
Using x0 make sure that we are using a registe that will have a positive value and breakpoint expression will evaluate true atleast once.
llvm-svn: 269164
This is not the right thing for all clients (notably the expression parser), so put it in type lookup specific code
Fixes rdar://problem/22422313
llvm-svn: 269095
Clear() log message was claiming it was the destructor, which had me very confused when looking
at the log messages. Fix the message, and add a log message to the real destructor.
Also noticed that the destructor was needlessly locking the broadcaster mutex (as Clear was
locking it again anyway), so remove that as well.
llvm-svn: 269058
Summary:
TestExitDuringStep was very rarely hanging on the buildbots. I can't be sure, but I believe this
was because of the fact that it declared its pseudo_barrier variable as "volatile int", which is
not sufficient to guarantee corectness (also, all other tests used atomic variables for this, and
they were passing reliably AFAIK). Besides switching to an atomic variable in this test as well,
I have also took this opportunity to unify all the copies of the pseudo_barrier code to a single
place to reduce the chance of this happening again.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20065
llvm-svn: 269025
This tests both that we set the breakpoint on the right line, and that restricting by file
and/or the function, we get the right breakpoints.
llvm-svn: 269004
IOHandlerLinesUpdated() does nothing, and IOHandlerIsInputComplete should be
implemented but isn't. This means that multiline expressions don't work. This
patch fixes that. Test case to follow in the next commit.
llvm-svn: 268970
llvm::Error requires all errors to be handled. Simply checking the whether there was an error is
not enough, you have to actuall call handle(All)Errors, in case there was an error.
llvm-svn: 268906
The IsValid calls can try to reconstruct the thread & frame, which can
take various internal locks. This can cause A/B locking issues with
the Target lock, so these calls need to that the Target lock.
llvm-svn: 268828
That's good 'cause it means all the different kinds of source line stepping won't leave user in the middle of
compiler implementation code or code inlined from odd places, etc. But it turns out that the compiler
also marks functions it MIGHT inline as all being of line 0. That would mean we single step through this code
instead of just stepping out. That is both inefficient, and more error prone 'cause these little nuggets tend
to be bits of hand-written assembly and the like and are hard to step through.
This change just checks and if the entire function is marked with line 0, we step out rather than step through.
<rdar://problem/25966460>
llvm-svn: 268823
Explicitly provide an initializer for the std::vector in the constructed type.
Addresses -Wmissing-field-initializers warnings from clang. NFC.
llvm-svn: 268758
Remove a couple of `default` cases from switches which are covered. This is
beneficial since it would allow the compiler to indicate when a new enum value
is added and the switch is not updated. Fixes some warnings from clang. NFC.
llvm-svn: 268756
"Allow LanguageRuntimes to return an error if they fail in the course of dynamic type discovery
This is not meant to report that a value doesn't have a dynamic type - it is only meant as a mechanism to propagate actual type discovery issues (e.g. malformed type metadata for languages that have such a notion)
This information is used by ValueObjectDynamic to set its own m_error, which is a fairly sharp and heavyweight tool to begin with
For the time being, this is an architectural improvement but a practical no-op as no existing runtimes are actually setting errors"
I need to think about what I want to do in this space more carefully - this attempt might be too heavy of a hammer for the nail I am trying to fix, and I don't want to leave it in while I ponder
llvm-svn: 268686
This change addresses a hang/segfault in TestEvents.py. The threads that
run the listener loops now do an SBListener.Clear() before they wrap up
their work. This prevents the test from trying to clean up the
SBListener too late.
There is a separate issue here which is that we should prevent this
clean-up time lock-up, but that is out of scope for this particular
change. I'd like to get these tests back and running the normal flow
rather than skipping them.
This addresses:
llvm.org/pr25924 (at least, the OS X side, although I suspect this will
also address Linux)
http://reviews.llvm.org/D19983
reviewed by: Jim Ingham
llvm-svn: 268653
The function only avaibleble when python is enabled. Guard the new call
in the Java plugin with LLDB_DISABLE_PYTHON until we can change
AddCXXSynthetic to be available in all case to get the build bots green
again.
llvm-svn: 268626
now that the timeout actually means something, we see that sometimes adb is just really slow in
replying to the DONE packet during file push. Give it more time to complete.
llvm-svn: 268623
Summary:
AdbClient would spin in a loop in ReadAllBytes in case the remote end was closed before reading
the requested number of bytes. Make sure we return an error in this case instead.
Reviewers: ovyalov
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19916
llvm-svn: 268617
Summary:
We were trying to get a DWARFDIE from a CompileUnit belonging to a DWO file. However, this
function does not understand the die encoding used by the DWO files. Instead use GetDIE on the
SymbolFileDWARF, which is overriden in DWO to do the right thing.
Reviewers: clayborg, tberghammer
Subscribers: lldb-commits, ovyalov
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19927
llvm-svn: 268615
This is not meant to report that a value doesn't have a dynamic type - it is only meant as a mechanism to propagate actual type discovery issues (e.g. malformed type metadata for languages that have such a notion)
This information is used by ValueObjectDynamic to set its own m_error, which is a fairly sharp and heavyweight tool to begin with
For the time being, this is an architectural improvement but a practical no-op as no existing runtimes are actually setting errors
llvm-svn: 268591
1. Fixed semicolon placement in the lambda in the test itself.
2. Fixed lldbinline tests in general so that we don't attempt tests on platforms that don't use the given type of debug info. (For example, no DWO tests on Windows.) This fixes one of the two failures on Windows. (TestLambdas.py was the only inline test that wasn't XFailed or skipped on Windows.)
3. Set the error string in IRInterpreter::CanInterpret so that the caller doesn't print (null) instead of an explanation. I don't entirely understand the error, so feel free to suggest a better wording.
4. XFailed the test on Windows. The interpreter won't evaluate the lambda because the module has multiple function bodies. I don't exactly understand why that's a problem for the interpreter nor why the problem arises only on Windows.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19606
llvm-svn: 268573
We don't want a mutex in debugger as it will cause A/B locking issues with the lldb_private::Target's mutex, but we do need to stop two threads from doing Debugger::Clear at the same time. We have seen issues with this with the C++ global destructor chain where the global debugger list is being destroyed and the Debugger::~Debugger() is calling it while another thread was in the middle of running that function.
<rdar://problem/26098913>
llvm-svn: 268563
should not be used for this module -- for use when an ObjectFile
knows that it does not have meaningful or accurate function start
addresses.
More commonly, it is not clear that function start addresses are
missing in a module. There are certain cases on Mac OS X where we
can tell that a Mach-O binary has been stripped of this essential
information, and the unwinder can end up emulating many megabytes
of instructions for a single "function" in the binary.
When a Mach-O binary is missing both an LC_FUNCTION_STARTS load
command (very unusual) and an eh_frame section, then we will assume
it has also been stripped of symbols and that instruction emulation
will not be useful on this module.
<rdar://problem/25988067>
llvm-svn: 268475
the field_begin that starts the copy or it won't do anything.
This causes failures, but only in complex apps, I haven't found
a reduced test case for this yet.
<rdar://problem/21951798>
llvm-svn: 268467
Summary:
As these are really testing separate issues, they should be run as separate
tests.
Reviewers: zturner, granata.enrico, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19690
llvm-svn: 268397
Summary:
AdbClient was attempting to handle the case where the socket input arrived in pieces, but it was
failing to handle the case where the connection was closed before that happened. In this case, it
would just spin in an infinite loop calling Connection::Read. (This was also the cause of the
spurious timeouts on the darwin->android buildbot. The exact cause of the premature EOF remains
to be investigated, but is likely a server bug.)
Since this wait-for-a-certain-number-of-bytes seems like a useful functionality to have, I am
moving it (with the infinite loop fixed) to the Connection class, and adding an
appropriate test for it.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner, ovyalov
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19533
llvm-svn: 268380
Also added a data formatter that presents them as structs if you use frame
variable to look at their contents. Now the blocks testcase works.
<rdar://problem/15984431>
llvm-svn: 268307