A local std::string was being filled in and then the function would return "s.c_str()".
A local StreamString (which contains a std::string) was being filled in, and essentially also returning the c string from the std::string, though it was in a the StreamString class.
The fix was to not do this by passing a stream object into StringList::Join() and fix the "arch_helper()" function to do what it should: cache the result in a global.
llvm-svn: 157519
Make 'help arch' return the list of supported architectures.
Add a convenience method StringList::Join(const char *separator) which is called from the help function for 'arch'.
Also add a simple test case.
llvm-svn: 157507
these functions will end in the sequence
mov %rbp, %rsp
ret
call __stack_chk_fail
instead of the usual mov, ret. The x86 assembly profiler only looked
for functions ending in 'ret' and added the Unwind row describing how to
set the CFA based on that -- the addition of the call insn (which is jumped
to earlier in the function body) threw off that inspection.
Resolves the need to "step" twice to get out of these functions when doing
source-level stepping.
<rdar://problem/11469705>
llvm-svn: 157454
Sending async packets can deadlock a program on darwin. We currently allow breakpoint packets and memory read/write packets (for software breakpoints) to be sent while a program is running. In the GDB remote plug-in, we will interrupt the run, send the async packet and resume (currently with the continue packet that caused the program to resume). If the GDB server supports the "vCont" packet, we might have initially continued with each thread stating it should continue. If new threads show up while we are stopped, which happend when running GCD, we can end up with new threads that we aren't mentioning in the continue list. So we start with a thread list of 1,2,3 and continue:
continue thread 1, continue thread 2, continue thread 3
Now we interrupt and set a breakpoint and we actually have threads 1,2,3,4 now when we are about to resume, yet we send:
continue thread 1, continue thread 2, continue thread 3
Any thread that isn't mentioned is currently going to stay suspended. This causes the deadlock.
llvm-svn: 157439
Supports the use-case scenario of immediately continuing the process once attached.
Add a simple completion test case from "process attach --con" to "process attach --continue ".
llvm-svn: 157361
Add default Process::GetWatchpointSupportInfo() impl which returns an error of "not supported".
Add "qWatchpointSupportInfo" packet to the gdb communication layer to support this, and modify TestWatchpointCommands.py to test it.
llvm-svn: 157345
the value_regs field, which is useful for future expansion purposes. As of now, we have:
calculated_offset_of_eax = offset_of_rax + (offset_of_eax_from_the_descriptor which is 0)
llvm-svn: 157275
Add convenience registers eax, ebx, ecx, edx, edi, esi, ebp, esp to the 'register read' command for x86_64.
Add a GDBRemoteRegisterContext::Addx86_64ConvenienceRegisters() method called from ProcessGDBRemote::BuildDynamicRegisterInfo().
Servicing of eax, for example, is accomplished by delegating to rax with an adjusted offset into the register context.
llvm-svn: 157230
"break set" commands to set this per breakpoint. Also, some CreateBreakpoint API's in the lldb_private
namespace had "internal" first and "skip_prologue" second. "internal should always be last. Fixed that.
rdar://problem/11484729
llvm-svn: 157225
(actually, mainly just hooked up support that was already
there). Added a test case, although it's expected to fail
right now unless you're using top-of-tree LLVM.
llvm-svn: 157220
we delete the watchpoint. The test succeeds when no more watchpoint hit event fires after the deletion of the watchpoint.
related to rdar://problem/11320188
llvm-svn: 157084