lldb -P, which outputs its python path, works by using Host-layer
facilities to get information about the loaded python module. This
Host functionality was unimplemented on Windows, so this patch
implements it. Additionally, it removes a pexpect dependency from
the test runner and uses an equivalent invocation of subprocess.
Reviewed by: Todd Fiala
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4548
llvm-svn: 213410
Fix the warning the correct way without making things crash when ENABLE_MUTEX_ERROR_CHECKING is non enabled.
<rdar://problem/17703039>
llvm-svn: 213394
99% of this CL is simply moving calls to "import pexpect" to a more
narrow scope - i.e. the function that actually runs a particular
test. This way the test suite can run on Windows, which doesn't have
pexpect, and the individual tests that use pexpect can be disabled on
a platform-specific basis.
Additionally, this CL fixes a few other cases of non-portability.
Notably, using "ps" to get the command line, and os.uname() to
determine the architecture don't work on Windows. Finally, this
also adds a stubbed out builder_win32 module.
The full test suite runs correctly on Windows after this CL, although
there is still some work remaining on the C++ side to fix one-shot
script commands from LLDB (e.g. script print "foo"), which currently
deadlock.
Reviewed by: Todd Fiala
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4573
llvm-svn: 213343
This fixes all of the hidden ivar test cases and any case where we try to find the full definition of an objective C class.
This also means hidden ivars show up again.
<rdar://problem/15458957>
llvm.org/pr20270
llvm.org/pr20269
llvm.org/pr20272
llvm-svn: 213328
_lldb is built as an extension module on Windows. Normally to load
an extension module named 'foo', Python would look for the file
'foo.pyd'. However, when a debug interpreter is used, Python will
look for the file 'foo_d.pyd'. This change checks the build
configuration and creates the correct symlink name based on the
build configuration.
llvm-svn: 213306
- First, when logging, be helpful by printing
the real name of the class;
- Second, up the limit for number of classes
from 16k to 128k, and put in an assertion
(and better error handling when not in a
debug configuration) when we cross that
limit the next time.
<rdar://problem/17052976>
llvm-svn: 213218
Also track down the required binary by trying to locate the main executable module through LLDB's symbol and executable file locating code.
<rdar://problem/16570258>
llvm-svn: 213199
The problem was that we have an IOHandler thread that services the IOHandler stack. The command interepter is on the top of the stack and it receives a "expression ..." command, and it calls the IOHandlerIsComplete() callback in the command interpereter delegate which runs an expression. This causes the IOHandlerProcessSTDIO to be pushed, but since we are running the code from the IOHandler thread, it won't get run. When CTRL+C is pressed, we do deliver the interrupt to the IOHandlerProcessSTDIO::Interrupt() function, but it was always writing 'i' to the interrupt pipe, even if we weren't actively reading from the debugger input and the pipes. This fix works around the issue by directly issuing the async interrupt to the process if the process is running.
A longer term more correct fix would to be run the IOHandler thread and have it just do the determination of the input and when complete input is received, run the code that handles that input on another thread and syncronize with that other thread to detect when more input is desired. That change is too big to make right now, so this fix will tide us over until we can get there.
<rdar://problem/16556228>
llvm-svn: 213196
This value gets set to a max uint32_t value when there is no known limit; otherwise,
it is set to a value appropriate for the platform. For the moment, only
Linux, FreeBSD and NetBSD set it to 16. All other platforms set it to
the max uint32_t value.
Modifies the Process private state thread names to fit within a 16-character limit
when the max thread name length is <= 16. These guarantee that the thread names
can be distinguished within the first 16 characters. Prior to this change, those
threads had names in the final dotted name segment that were not distinguishable
within the first 16 characters.
llvm-svn: 213183
r213171 renames the 'clangRewriteCore' library to 'clangRewrite'.
This change simply updates the makefiles to reference the correct
library name.
llvm-svn: 213181
This change adds a member to the base test case for gdb-remote that
indicates whether a stub makes two X stop notification reports on kill
commands. This is set to true for debugserver tests.
The test for killing an attached process after it's first stop notification
has been modified to look at that flag and add an extra X packet matcher
so the "unmatched packet warning" doesn't get emitted for the second X on
MacOSX with debugserver.
I also broke those tests out of the monolithic TestLldbGdbServer mega test
case and put it in its own, new TestGdbRemoteKill.py file and test case.
Tested:
Ubuntu 14.04 x86_64, clang-3.5 built lldb, no test failures.
MacOSX 10.9.4, Xcode 6.0 Beta 3 built lldb, no test failures.
llvm-svn: 213166
This change comprises of additions and some minor changes in order that
"kalimba" is listed as a supported platform and that debugging any
kalimbas results in PlatformKalimba being associated with the target.
The changes are as follows:
* The PlatformKalimba implementation itself
* A tweak to ArchSpec
* .note parsing for Kalimba in ObjectFileELF.cpp
* Plugin registration
* Makefile additions
Change by Matthew Gardiner
Minor tweak for cmake and Xcode by Todd Fiala
Tested:
Ubuntu 14.04 x86_64, clang 3.5-built lldb, all tests pass.
MacOSX 10.9.4, Xcode 6.0 Beta 1-built lldb, all tests pass.
llvm-svn: 213158
Fixed the test case to use a runtime function prototype that will be correct ([NSString stringWithCString: "new"]) instead of one that won't (expression str = [NSString stringWithFormat: @"%cew", 'N']). The runtime doesn't track vararg functions correctly so we can't reconstitute the function correctly.
Also fixed some expressions that used "str_id" whose type was "id" and do the necessary casting since "id" doesn't have any methods.
llvm-svn: 213113
LinuxThread.cpp
LinuxThread.h
NativeRegisterContext.h
ProcessLinux.cpp
ProcessLinux.h
ProcessMonitor.cpp
ProcessMonitor.h
Were inserted in the CopyFiles phase of the "desktop" aggregate target. That caused them to get
copied to /usr/shared/man/man1 on install, which isn't right. Not sure why they were there...
I removed them. If this was supposed to achieve some other purpose, we should discuss how to do
that correctly on the mailing list.
<rdar://problem/17642262>
llvm-svn: 213094
Any commands that want interactivity (stdin) will need to be executed through the normal command interpreter using the debugger's in/out/err file handles, or by using "command source".
Individual commands through the API will have their STDIN disabled. The STDOUT and STDERR will be redirected into the SBCommandReturnObject argument to SBCommandInterpreter::HandleCommand() as usual.
This helps with a deadlock situation in an IDE (Xcode) where the IDE was managing the breakpoint actions by setting a breakpoint callback and doing things manually.
<rdar://problem/17386271>
llvm-svn: 213023
Now that llgs supports communicating the 0-port choose-a-port
mechanism and can communicate that back to a caller via the
--named-pipe option (at parity with debugserver), we use this
mechanism to always start llgs and debugserver gdb-remote
protocol tests without needing to use some port arbitration
mechanism. This eliminates some potential intermittent failures vs. the
previous random port and collision-avoidance strategy used.
llvm-svn: 212923
This is the last flag sent by lldb-platform that was not accepted
by llgs and is accepted by debugserver.
Conditionalized out a bit more code in prep for Windows
support one day based on _WIN32 define.
Updated the lldb-gdbserver usage string to represent
recent updates to command line arguments (and some older
ones like --attach pid).
Implements https://github.com/tfiala/lldb/issues/37
llvm-svn: 212879
The testrun now completes successfully on my FreeBSD 11.0-CURRENT
laptop. There are some intermittent failures on the FreeBSD buildbot
still, which should be addressed in later commits.
llvm.org/pr20274
llvm-svn: 212878
The --setsid (-S) option changes the session id for the lldb-gdbserver process.
This is used by tools such as lldb-platform and allows the user to prevent
llgs from being in the same session as a calling terminal session.
This will prevents terminal group control signals from affecting
lldb-gdbserver.
See also:
https://github.com/tfiala/lldb/issues/38
llvm-svn: 212873
Added a unit test to test debugserver and llgs compliance on --named-pipe support.
Modified llgs to implement --named-pipe support. (Note: need to revisit with
new generic pipe support).
llvm-svn: 212854
The fix adds a std::weak_ptr<Module> into the TypeImpl and fills in the weak pointer when possible. It also checks to make sure the module is still alive prior to using it which should make our API safer to use.
<rdar://problem/15455145>
llvm-svn: 212853
If we have any section headers in the collection, we already parsed them.
Therefore, don't reparse the section headers when the section_headers collection
is not empty.
See this thread for more details:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/lldb-commits/Week-of-Mon-20140707/011721.html
Change by Matthew Gardiner
llvm-svn: 212822
This patch fixes a number of issues with embedded Python on
Windows. In particular:
1) The script that builds the python modules was normalizing the
case of python filenames during copies. The module name is
the filename, and is case-sensitive, so this was breaking code.
2) Changes the build to not attempt to link against python27.lib
(e.g. the release library) when linking against msvcrt debug
library. Doing a debug build of LLDB with embedded python
support now requires you to provide your own self-compiled
debug version of python.
3) Don't import termios when initializing the interpreter. This
is part of a larger effort to remove the dependency on termios
since it is not available on Windows. This particular instance
was unnecessary and unused.
Reviewed by: Todd Fiala
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4441
llvm-svn: 212785
Fixes include:
- Don't say that "<arch>-apple-ios" is compatible with "<arch>-apple-macosx"
- Fixed DynamicLoaderMacOSXDYLD so specify an architecture that was converted solely from a cputype and subtype, just specify the file + UUID.
- Fixed PlatformiOSSimulator::GetSupportedArchitectureAtIndex() so it returns the correct archs
- Fixed SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap to load .o files correctly by just specifying the architecture without the vendor and OS now that "<arch>-apple-ios" is not compatible with "<arch>-apple-macosx" so we can load .o files correctly for DWARF with debug map
- Fixed the coded in TargetList::CreateTarget() so it does the right thing with an underspecified triple where just the arch is specified.
llvm-svn: 212783
The following intermittently-failing tests have been flipped from
skip to XFAIL on some combo of Linux and MacOSX:
TestCallStopAndContinue.py (Linux, MacOSX)
TestCallWithTimeout.py (Linux)
TestConvenienceVariables.py (Linux)
TestStopHookMultipleThreads.py (Linux)
The following new tests have been marked XFAIL but are just
intermittently failing:
TestMultipleDebug.py (definitely intermittent on MacOSX, not sure I've seen
it pass yet on Linux)
llvm-svn: 212762
Being in lldb\source, ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR} would resolve to
the build\tools\lldb\source directory. For correct operation, and
parity with the shell script, it needs to resolve to the
build\tools\lldb\scripts directory.
llvm-svn: 212760
These fix the broken debian lldb build, which is using g++ 4.7.2.
TypeFormat changes:
1. stopped using the C++11 "dtor = default;" construct.
The generated default destructor in the two derived classes wanted
them to have a different throws() semantic that was causing 4.7 to
fail to generate it. I switched these to empty destructors defined
in the .cpp file.
2. Switched the m_types map from an ordered map to an unordered_map.
g++ 4.7's c++ library supports the C++11 emplace() used by TypeFormat
but the same c++ library's map impl does not. Since TypeFormat didn't
look like it depended on ordering in the map, I just switched it to
a std::unordered_map.
NativeProcessLinux - g++ 4.7 chokes on lexing the "<::" in
static_cast<::pid_t>(wpid). g++ 4.8+ and clang are fine with it.
I just put a space in between the "<" and the "::" and that cleared
it up.
llvm-svn: 212681
debug sessions simultaneously to expose race conditoin/locking
issues.
This directory has an inferior program, testprog.cpp that has a
couple of functions we can put breakpoints on.
It has a driver program, multi-process-driver.cpp, which links
against the LLDB solib and uses the SB APIs. It creates 50 pthreads,
creates a debugger on all of them, launches a debug session of the
inferior testprog, hits a couple breakpoints, walks the stack,
continues, etc., and then kills the inferior and ends the debug
session.
A pass is if all fifty debug sessions complete successfully
in the alloted time (~60 seconds).
We may need to tweak this one to work correctly on different
platforms/targets but I wanted to get it checked in to start.
llvm-svn: 212671
Marked skipped for Linux:
TestCallStopAndContinue
TestConvenienceVariables
TestStopHookMultipleThreads
Fixed up gdb-remote port-grabbing code to use a random port in a wide range,
and to allow that to fail more gracefully. This appears to have solved some
gdb-remote intermittent failing behavior.
llvm-svn: 212662
All tests matching '-p TestObjCMethods' now are marked correctly for MacOSX, and some
error classes have been removed in cleanup code looking for files that
might not exist due to previous failure.
See http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20267
llvm-svn: 212650
The current strategy for host allocation is to choose a random
address and attempt to allocate there, eventually failing if the
allocation cannot be satisfied.
The C standard only guarantees that RAND_MAX >= 32767, so for
platforms that use a very small RAND_MAX allocations will fail
with very high probability. On such platforms (Windows is one),
you can reproduce this trivially by running lldb, typing "expr (3)"
and then hitting enter you see a failure. Failures generally
happen with a frequency of about 1 failure every 5 evaluations.
There is no good reason that allocations need to look like "real"
pointers, so this patch changes the allocation scheme to simply
jump straight to the end and grab a free chunk of memory.
Reviewed By: Sean Callanan
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4300
llvm-svn: 212630
The getopt library has a structure called option (lowercase). We
have a structure called Option (uppercase). previously the two
structures had exactly the same definitions, and we were doing a
C-style cast of an Option* to an option*. C-style casts don't
bother to warn you when you cast to unrelated types, but in the
original OptionValidator patch I modified the definition of Option.
This patch fixes the errors by building an array of option
structures and filling it out the correct way before passing it to
the getopt library.
This also fixes one other source of test failures: an uninitialized
read that occurs due to not initializing a field of the
OptionDefinition.
Reviewed By: Todd Fiala
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4425
llvm-svn: 212628
On MacOSX, we need to adjust the way we clean up the crashlog dylib in deleteCrashInfoDylib().
Right now it is only geared to run one test at a time. For now I'm just skipping the delete.
I'll work with Apple on a fix that handles this. It seems to only cause one dylib total to
hang around that might otherwise have been deleted. Fixes MacOSX multiple tests running
at the same time. (I didn't hit this on Yosemite, might be an issue that only shows up
on Mavericks?)
llvm-svn: 212548
This reverses out the options validators changes. We'll get these
back in once the changes to the output can be resolved.
Restores broken tests on FreeBSD, Linux, MacOSX.
Changes reverted: r212500, r212317, r212290.
llvm-svn: 212543
This change modifies the way the multi-threaded test runner works.
It uses the Python multiprocessing library rather than the threading
library. Investigation showed that all MacOSX threads were waiting on
the global python lock when using the threading approach. Not sure
why that differed from the Linux/FreeBSD implementations.
The new approach uses the multiprocessing library's Pool class. It's
mildly cleaner than the other version, runs multithreaded on MacOSX,
and seems to have caused no performance regression on Linux. The
worker thread logic is simpler with the Pool managing the worker
processes.
This also includes a minor change to the test runner's python
lldb dir logic using the -P option. It now looks at the last line
of output rather than the first line. This covers part of the issue
of extra options validation logic getting spit out. The test runner
will now pick up the right python library directory. It does not
fix all the issues, though, as a ton of tests (50+ on Linux) are
failing due to unexpected output when running lldb.
llvm-svn: 212513
This patch implements basic functionality of the "platform process
list" command for Windows. Currently this has the following
limitations.
* Certain types of filtering are not enabled (e.g. filtering by
architecture with -a), although most filters work.
* The username of the process is not yet obtained.
* Using -v to list verbose information generates an error.
* The architecture column displays the entire triple, leading to
misaligned formatting of the printed table.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4413
llvm-svn: 212510
Windows uses a different process security model and does not have
a concept of process UID or GID. This patch makes these options
invalid on Windows. Attempting to specify these options when the
current platform is Windows will generate an error.
Reviewed by: Jim Ingham
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4373
llvm-svn: 212500
Teach add_lldb_library to correctly use the CMake 2.8.12
PUBLIC/PRIVATE/INTERFACE keywords. LLDB's CMake configuration would
inconsistently apply these keywords; this was previously a warning in
CMake 2.x but became an error in CMake 3.
llvm-svn: 212482
This change removes the ScriptInterpreter::TerminateInterpreter() call which
ended up endlessly calling itself as things currently stand. It also cleans
up some other Windows-related cmake changes.
See http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/lldb-commits/Week-of-Mon-20140630/011544.html
for more details.
Change by Zachary Turner
llvm-svn: 212320
Currently Windows disables Python builds by default. This
change ensures we don't process the scripts dir when we're
on Windows unless we're explicitly enabling python, which
prevents a build error.
Change by Deepak Panickal
llvm-svn: 212319
The purpose of the OptionValidator is to determine, based on some
arbitrary set of conditions, whether or not a command option is
valid for a given debugger state. An example of this might be
to selectively disable or enable certain command options that
don't apply to a particular platform.
This patch contains no functional change, and does not actually
make use of an OptionValidator for any purpose yet. A follow-up
patch will begin to add the logic and users of OptionValidator.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton, Jim Ingham
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4369
llvm-svn: 212290
See http://reviews.llvm.org/D4366 for details.
Change by Paul Paul Osmialowski
Today this is the only problem that I'm facing trying to cross-compile lldb for AArch64 using Linaro's toolchain.
PTRACE_GETREGS, PTRACE_SETREGS, PTRACE_GETFPREGS, PTRACE_SETFPREGS are not defined for AArch64
These things can be defined different ways for other architectures, e.g. for x86_64 Linux, asm/ptrace-abi.h defines them as preprocessor constants while sys/ptrace.h defines them in enum along with corresponding PT_* preprocessor constants
NativeProcessLinux.cpp includes sys/ptrace.h
To avoid accidental redefinition of enums with preprocessor constants, I'm proposing this patch which first checks for PT_* preprocessor constants then checks for PTRACE_* constants then when it still can not find them, it defines preprocessor constants.
Similar approach was already used for PTRACE_GETREGSET and PTRACE_SETREGSET constants; in this case however it was easier, since enum values in sys/ptrace.h and preprocessor constants shared all exactly the same names (e.g. there's no additional PT_GETREGSET name defined).
llvm-svn: 212225
Windows does support pipes, but they do so in a slightly different way. Added a Host layer which abstracts the use of pipes into a new Pipe class that everyone can use.
Windows benefits include:
- Being able to interrupt running processes when IO is directly hooked up
- being able to interrupt long running python scripts
- being able to interrupt anything based on ConnectionFileDescriptor
llvm-svn: 212220
The only part using Carbon is a function in Host.mm used to open a file in Xcode.
That code is broken and it is no longer useful as Xcode supports LLDB natively.
llvm-svn: 212208
off_t is a type which is used for file offsets. Even more
specifically, it is only used by a limited number of C APIs that
deal with files. Any usage of off_t where the variable is not
intended to be used with one of these APIs is a bug, by definition.
This patch corrects some easy mis-uses of off_t, generally by
converting them to lldb::offset_t, but sometimes by using other
types such as size_t, when appropriate.
The use of off_t to represent these offsets has worked fine in
practice on linux-y platforms, since we used _FILE_OFFSET_64 to
guarantee that off_t was a uint64. On Windows, however,
_FILE_OFFSET_64 is unrecognized, and off_t will always be 32-bit.
So the usage of off_t on Windows actually leads to legitimate bugs.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4358
llvm-svn: 212192
- Ported the SWIG wrapper shell scripts to Python so that they would work on Windows too along with other platforms
- Updated CMake handling to fix SWIG errors and manage sym-linking on Windows to liblldb.dll
- More build fixes for Windows
The pending issues are that two Python modules, termios and pexpect are not available on Windows.
These are currently required for the Python command interpreter to be used from within LLDB.
llvm-svn: 212111
There were a few places where we were not catching the possibility of negative
error codes in waitpid() calls. This change fixes those remaining after
the llgs branch fixes to ProcessMonitor.
Change by Shawn Best.
llvm-svn: 212107
With _HAS_EXCEPTIONS=0, Windows' version of <thread> will fail to
compile because it calls __uncaught_exception(), which is compiled
out due to _HAS_EXCEPTIONS=0. This just creates a stub version
of __uncaught_exception() which always fails.
llvm-svn: 212076
Also moves NativeRegisterContextLinux* files into the Linux directory.
These, like NativeProcessLinux, should only be built on Linux or a cross
compiler with proper headers.
llvm-svn: 212074
This change brings in lldb-gdbserver (llgs) specifically for Linux x86_64.
(More architectures coming soon).
Not every debugserver option is covered yet. Currently
the lldb-gdbserver command line can start unattached,
start attached to a pid (process-name attach not supported yet),
or accept lldb attaching and launching a process or connecting
by process id.
The history of this large change can be found here:
https://github.com/tfiala/lldb/tree/dev-tfiala-native-protocol-linux-x86_64
Until mid/late April, I was not sharing the work and continued
to rebase it off of head (developed via id tfiala@google.com). I switched over to
user todd.fiala@gmail.com in the middle, and once I went to github, I did
merges rather than rebasing so I could share with others.
llvm-svn: 212069
Both NativeProcessLinux (in llgs branch) and Linux Host.cpp had similar code to handle /proc
file reading. I factored that out into a new Linux-specific ProcFileReader class and added a method
that the llgs branch will use for line-by-line parsing.
This change also adds numerous Linux-specific files to Xcode that were missing from the Xcode
project files.
Related to https://github.com/tfiala/lldb/issues/27
llvm-svn: 212015
Elevate ProcessInfo and ProcessLaunchInfo into their own headers.
llgs will be using ProcessLaunchInfo but doesn't need to pull in
the rest of Process.h.
This also moves a bunch of implementation details from the header
declarations into ProcessInfo.cpp and ProcessLaunchInfo.cpp.
Tested on Ubuntu 14.04 Cmake and MacOSX Xcode.
Related to https://github.com/tfiala/lldb/issues/26.
llvm-svn: 212005
Also added tests for presence of vCont;c, vCont;C, vCont;s, vCont;S as
returned by vCont? query.
Broke out single step functionality from TestLldbGdbServer into base class.
Used by new TestGdbRemoteSingleStep (using $s) and TestGdbRemote_vCont.
Also part of llgs wrap-up, see:
https://github.com/tfiala/lldb/issues/12
llvm-svn: 211965
Removed the distribution EXEs from FreeBSD and Ubuntu.
Added a hello-world .cpp file, and compiled it for
several platform/compiler variants:
Ubuntu 14.04 x86_64, clang 3.5 (the ubuntu1 3.5 pre variant)
Ubuntu 14.04 x86_64, gcc 4.8.2
FreeBSD 10.0 x86_64, clang 3.3
FreeBSD 10.0 x86_64, gcc 4.7.3
NetBSD 6.1 x86_64, gcc 4.5.3
I also added the NetBSD expected architecture and triple.
Note I have NetBSD not appending the version info to the
OS name, in contrast to FreeBSD.
llvm-svn: 211954
Previously ObjectFileELF was simplifying and assuming the object file it was
looking at was the same as the host architecture/triple. This would break
attempts to run, say, lldb on MacOSX against lldb-gdbserver on Linux since
the MacOSX lldb would say that the linux elf file was really an Apple MacOSX
architecture. Chaos would ensue.
This change allows the elf file to parse ELF notes for Linux, FreeBSD and
NetBSD, and determine the OS appropriately from them. It also initializes
the OS type from the ELF header OSABI if it is set (which it is for FreeBSD
but not for Linux).
Added a test with freebsd and linux images that verify that
'(lldb) image list -t -A' prints out the expected architecture for each.
llvm-svn: 211907
python bindings.
For example, this prevents errors on systems that disable python because
the system python isn't available. Without this, we still try to install
things and get install errors when that doesn't work.
llvm-svn: 211899
Replace adhoc inline implementation of llvm::array_lengthof in favour of the
implementation in LLVM. This is simply a cleanup change, no functional change
intended.
llvm-svn: 211868
Now that I'm building Linux with clang, I'm seeing more clang warnings.
This fills in some extra fields missing in the final end-of-structure-array
marker.
llvm-svn: 211812
Previously, only the starting locations of the candidate interval
and the existing interval were compared. To correctly detect
range intersections, it is necessary to compare the entire range
of both intervals against each other.
Reviewed by: scallanan
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4286
llvm-svn: 211726
Not all supported compilers have GCC intrinsics, so this patch
uses the correct portable alternative.
Additionally, this patch fixes an off-by-one error. __builtin_ffs
returns the 1-based index of the least-significant 1-bit, but the
function expects the base 2 logarithm of the number, which is
equivalent to the 0-based index of the least-significant 1-bit.
Reviewed by: Keno Fischer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4284
llvm-svn: 211669
Clean up this one specifically, as it has the effect of double-spacing
the list of thread stop reasons, and substantially bloats the log file
when opening a core with hundreds of threads.
There are other cases of extra newlines. Some of them do increase
readability, so avoid a general sweep for now.
llvm-svn: 211655
The patch is as is with the functionality left disabled for apple vendors because of performance regressions. If this is enabled it ends up searching for symbols in all shared libraries that are loadeded.
llvm-svn: 211638
process fully reaped. The race & bad behavior was because we were letting
the reaping thread in LLDB to also set the Process exit status, so debugserver
would sometimes be shut down before it got a chance to report the exit status,
and then we got confused.
<rdar://problem/16555850>
llvm-svn: 211636
r209631: Use MIUtilSystemLinux on FreeBSD as well
We should later rename this file (probably MIUtilSystemPOSIX), but
more clean-up is still needed here, and we can wait until we better
understand how this code may be shared between FreeBSD, Linux, and OS X.
r209632: Add stdlib.h for malloc and friends
r209633: Remove include of obsolete stropts.h header
The header is for POSIX streams functionality, and does not exist on
FreeBSD, OS X, or contemporary Linux distributions.
Issue reported by John Wolfe.
llvm-svn: 211620
mistake in the lock acquistion in HistoryUnwind and HistoryThread.
We've got a deadlock with one use case of HistoryUnwind; I
need to figure out what lock ordering is causing this and fix
it for real.
<rdar://problem/17411904>
llvm-svn: 211541