Summary:
This patch fixes a problem with retrieving a function symbol by an address in a nested block. In the current implementation of ResolveSymbolContext function it retrieves a symbol with PDB_SymType::None and then checks if found symbol's tag equals to PDB_SymType::Function. So, if nested block's symbol was found, ResolveSymbolContext does not resolve a function.
It is very simple to reproduce this. For example, in the next program
```
int main() {
auto r = 0;
for (auto i = 1; i <= 10; i++) {
r += i & 1 + (i - 1) & 1 - 1;
}
return r;
}
```
if we will stop inside the cycle and will do a backtrace, the top element will be broken. But how we can test this? I thought to add an option to lldb-test to allow search a function by address, but the address may change when the compiler will be changed.
Patch by: Aleksandr Urakov
Reviewers: asmith, labath, zturner
Reviewed By: asmith, labath
Subscribers: stella.stamenova, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47939
llvm-svn: 336564
This patch removes the requirement for a semicolon as a separator when
passing arguments to lit. It relies on the shlex module that is part of
Python to do simple lexical analysis, similar to what happens in a Unix
shell.
llvm-svn: 336290
Summary:
This test makes sure we are able to read the shorter build-ids which are
generated by lld.
To make this work, I've extended lldb-test to print the UUID of the
loaded object file. I've renamed the lldb-test subcommand from
"module-sections" to "object-file" to reflect the fact it prints more
than just the sections.
I've also added the module Architecture to the output, so we could avoid
printing the entire symbol file information just to get the ArchSpec
details in the lc_version_min test (which was also the only test in it's
folder not using the module-sections command).
Reviewers: aprantl, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48646
llvm-svn: 335967
Summary:
This patch fixes a problem with retrieving a function symbol by an
address in a nested block. In the current implementation of
ResolveSymbolContext function it retrieves a symbol with
PDB_SymType::None and then checks if found symbol's tag equals to
PDB_SymType::Function. So, if nested block's symbol was found,
ResolveSymbolContext does not resolve a function.
Reviewers: asmith, labath, zturner
Reviewed By: asmith, labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47939
Patch by Aleksandr Urakov <aleksandr.urakov@jetbrains.com>
llvm-svn: 335822
This fixes a silly bug where we were accidentally freeing the memory
used to store the decompressed .debug_names data. I had actually
considered this scenario when writing the class and put appropriate
precautions in place -- I just failed to wire it all up correctly.
This was only an issue for compressed sections because in case of
uncompressed ones we would access the data straight out of the mmapped
object file.
llvm-svn: 334717
The motivation for this is to be able to Dwarf index ability to look up
variables within a given compilation unit. It also fits in with the
patch in progress at D47939, which will add the ability to look up
funtions using file+line pairs.
The verification of which lldb-test options can be used together was
getting a bit unwieldy, so I moved the logic out into a separate
function.
llvm-svn: 334498
The getDIESectionOffset function is not correct for split dwarf files
(and will probably be removed in D48009).
This patch implements correct section offset computation for split and
non-split compile units -- we first need to check if the referenced unit
is a skeleton unit, and if it is, we add the die offset to the full unit
base offset (as the full unit is the one which contains the die).
llvm-svn: 334402
This also fixes a bug where SymbolFileDWARF was returning the same
function multiple times - this can happen if both mangled and demangled
names match the regex. Other lookup lookup functions had code to handle
this case, but it was forgotten here.
llvm-svn: 334277
Summary:
This patch implements the non-regex variant of GetFunctions. To share
more code with the Apple implementation, I've extracted the common
filtering code from that class into a utility function on the DWARFIndex
base class.
The new implementation also searching the accelerator table multiple
times -- previously it could happen that the apple table would return
the same die more than once if one specified multiple search flags in
name_type_mask. This way, I separate table iteration from filtering, and
so we can be sure each die is inserted at most once.
Reviewers: clayborg, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47881
llvm-svn: 334273
Summary:
The patch adds support of splitted functions (when MSVC is used with PGO) and function-level linking feature.
SymbolFilePDB::ParseCompileUnitLineTable function relies on fact that ranges of compiled source files in the binary are continuous and don't intersect each other. The function creates LineSequence for each file and inserts it into LineTable, and implementation of last one relies on continuity of the sequence. But it's not always true when function-level linking enabled, e.g. in added input test file test-pdb-function-level-linking.exe there is xstring's std__basic_string_char_std__char_traits_char__std__allocator_char_____max_size (.00454820) between test-pdb-function-level-linking.cpp's foo (.00454770) and main (.004548F0).
To fix the problem this patch renews the sequence on each address gap.
Reviewers: asmith, zturner
Reviewed By: asmith
Subscribers: aleksandr.urakov, labath, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47708
llvm-svn: 334260
Summary: They all correspond to bugs that are already logged and I've added the appropriate (or most appropriate) bug numbers. This leaves only a handful of failing tests.
Reviewers: asmith, zturner, labath
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: eraman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47892
llvm-svn: 334210
This implements just one of the GetTypes overloads. The other is not
testable from lldb-test so I'm leaving it unimplemented until I figure
out what to do with testing.
llvm-svn: 334190
Summary:
It possible that a single module has indexed and non-indexed compile
units. In this case, we can use the fast indexed lookup for the first
ones and fall back to the manual index for the others.
This patch implements this functionality by adding a units_to_avoid
argument to the ManualDWARFIndex constructor. Any units present in that
list will be ignored for the purposes of manual index. Individual
DebugNamesDWARFIndex then always consult both the manual fallback index
as well as the index in the .debug_names section.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47832
llvm-svn: 334185
Summary:
This patch adds the ability to lookup variables to the DWARF v5 index
class.
During review we discovered an inconsistency between how the existing
two indexes handle looking up qualified names of the variables:
- manual index would return a value if the input string exactly matched
the demangled name of some variable.
- apple index ignored the context and returned any variable with the
same base name.
So, this patch also rectifies that situation:
- it removes all context handling from the index classes. The
GetGlobalVariables functions now just take a base name. For manual
index, this meant we can stop putting demangled names into the
variable index (this matches the behavior for functions).
- context extraction is put into SymbolFileDWARF, so that it is common
to all indexes.
- additional filtering based on the context is also done in
SymbolFileDWARF. This is done via a simple substring search, which is
not ideal, but it matches what we are doing for functions (cf.
Module::LookupInfo::Prune).
Reviewers: clayborg, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47781
llvm-svn: 334181
Summary:
This patch adds the skeleton for implementing the DWARF v5 name index
class. All of the methods are stubbed out and will be implemented in
subsequent patches. The interesting part of the patch is the addition of
a "ignore-file-indexes" setting to the dwarf plugin which enables a
user to force using manual indexing path in lldb (for example as a
debugging aid). I have also added a test that verifies that file indexes
are used by default.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: mgorny, mehdi_amini, aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47629
llvm-svn: 334088
Skip all Python-based tests as unsupported when LLDB_DISABLE_PYTHON is
enabled. Otherwise, those tests simply fail being unable to import lldb
module.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47812
llvm-svn: 334080
Summary: This test was failing sporadically on windows because the order in which the symbols are generated was different between builds. To fix the test, we need to run FileCheck twice - once for each set of symbols we want to verify. The test only runs on Windows.
Reviewers: asmith, zturner, labath
Subscribers: stella.stamenova, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47746
llvm-svn: 334025
Summary:
The default name for a compiler output on Linux is `a.out`,
while on Windows it's `a.exe`. But if we add option `-o a.exe`,
the compiler will create the executable `a.exe` on the both systems.
Reviewers: aprantl, stella.stamenova
Reviewed By: stella.stamenova
Subscribers: ki.stfu, llvm-commits, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47679
llvm-svn: 333963
Change the syntax of the malloc and free commands in lldb-test's
ir-memory-map subcommand to:
<malloc> ::= <label> = malloc <size> <alignment>
<free> ::= free <label>
This should make it easier to read and extend tests in the future, e.g
to test IRMemoryMap::WriteMemory or double-free behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47646
llvm-svn: 333930
Add OpenBSD python module in order to support unit tests.
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47692
llvm-svn: 333888
Summary:
When searching for methods only, we need to do extra work to make sure
the functions we get from the apple tables are indeed methods.
Previously we were resolving the DIE into a SymbolContext and then
checked whether the enclosing CompilerDeclContext is a
class (or struct, or union).
This patch changes that to operate on the debug info directly. This
should be:
- simpler
- faster
- more consistent with the ManualDWARFIndex (which does the same check,
only at indexing time).
What we lose this ways is for the language plugin to have a say in what
it considers to be a "class", but that's probably more flexibility than
we need (and if we really wanted to do that in the future, we could
implement a more direct way to consult the plugin about this).
This also fixes the find-method-local-struct test, which was failing
because we were not able to construct a CompilerDeclContext for a local
struct correctly.
As a drive-by, I rename the DWARFDIE's IsStructClassOrUnion method to
match the name on the CompilerDeclContext class.
Reviewers: clayborg, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47470
llvm-svn: 333878
Summary: One of the tests is failing to build because it needs GS-, the second test does not correctly match all the expected function names because newer DIA SDKs annotate the function names with their return type and inputs (e.g. "static long `anonymous namespace'::StaticFunction(int)")
Reviewers: asmith, zturner
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47653
llvm-svn: 333790
Summary: Skip the new break-insert test on Windows because it hangs and so the test suite never completes. All other lldb-mi tests in the test suite are also skipped on windows
Reviewers: asmith, aprantl, polyakov.alex
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: ki.stfu, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47651
llvm-svn: 333789
It's been pointed out in https://reviews.llvm.org/D47646 that lldb-test
fails to create a usable process on Windows when running this test.
llvm-svn: 333785
This adds a new command to the ir-memory-map tester:
free <allocation-index>
The argument to free is an index which identifies which live allocation
to free. Index 0 identifies the first live allocation in the address
space, index 1 identifies the second, etc. where the allocations are
sorted in increasing order.
For illustrative purposes, assume malloc returns monotonically
increasing addresses. Here are some examples of how free would work:
Example 1
---------
malloc 16 1
malloc 32 1
free 1 //< Free the 32-byte allocation.
free 0 //< Next, free the 16-byte allocation.
Example 2
---------
malloc 16 1
malloc 32 1
free 0 //< Free the 16-byte allocation.
free 0 //< Next, free the 32-byte allocation.
llvm-svn: 333700
r333583 introduced testing for IRMemoryMap's process-side allocations
(eAllocationPolicyProcessOnly). This adds support for the host-side
variety (eAllocationPolicyHostOnly).
llvm-svn: 333698
This prevents Malloc from allocating the same chunk of memory twice, as
a byproduct of an alignment adjustment which gave the client access to
unallocated memory.
Prior to this patch, the newly-added test failed with:
$ lldb-test ir-memory-map ... ir-memory-map-overlap1.test
...
Command: malloc(size=64, alignment=32)
Malloc: address = 0x1000cd080
Command: malloc(size=64, alignment=8)
Malloc: address = 0x1000cd0b0
Malloc error: overlapping allocation detected, previous allocation at [0x1000cd080, 0x1000cd0c0)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47551
llvm-svn: 333697
This teaches lldb-test how to launch a process, set up an IRMemoryMap,
and issue memory allocations in the target process through the map. This
makes it possible to test IRMemoryMap in a targeted way.
This has uncovered two bugs so far. The first bug is that Malloc
performs an adjustment on the pointer returned from AllocateMemory (for
alignment purposes) which ultimately allows overlapping memory regions
to be created. The second bug is that after most of the address space on
the host side is exhausted, Malloc may return the same address multiple
times. These bugs (and hopefully more!) can be uncovered and tested for
with targeted lldb-test commands.
At an even higher level, the motivation for addressing these bugs is
that they can lead to strange user-visible failures (e.g, variables
assume the wrong value during expression evaluation, or the debugger
crashes). See my third comment on this swift-lldb PR for an example:
https://github.com/apple/swift-lldb/pull/652
I hope lldb-test is the right place to add this testing harness. Setting
up a gtest-style unit test proved too cumbersome (you need to recreate
or mock way too much debugger state), as did writing end-to-end tests
(it's hard to write a test that actually hits a buggy path).
With lldb-test, it's easy to read/generate the test input and parse the
test output. I'll attach a simple "fuzz" tester which generates failing
test cases to the Phab review. Here's an example:
```
Command: malloc(size=1024, alignment=32)
Malloc: address = 0xca000
Command: malloc(size=64, alignment=16)
Malloc: address = 0xca400
Command: malloc(size=1024, alignment=16)
Malloc: address = 0xca440
Command: malloc(size=16, alignment=8)
Malloc: address = 0xca840
Command: malloc(size=2048, alignment=16)
Malloc: address = 0xcb000
Command: malloc(size=64, alignment=32)
Malloc: address = 0xca860
Command: malloc(size=1024, alignment=16)
Malloc: address = 0xca890
Malloc error: overlapping allocation detected, previous allocation at [0xca860, 0xca8a0)
```
{F6288839}
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47508
llvm-svn: 333583
The lldb test suite is highly configurable. While part of this
configuration takes place at configure/build-time, a common scenario
involves running the test suite several times with different
configuration. For example, we might want to test the current lldb
against inferiors built with different compilers.
This configuration was already possible for lldb-dotest, but was lacking
for the lit counterpart. It is now possible to pass arguments to pass
arguments like this:
./bin/llvm-lit ../llvm/tools/lldb/lit/Suite/ -Ddotest-args="-foo;-bar"
llvm-svn: 333432
Summary:
We were treating subprograms and inlined subroutines differently when
building the index. The difference was in which indexes were individual
tags inserted (subprograms went to all indexes, where as inlined
subroutines only into the basename and full name indexes).
This seems like an error, because an inlined subroutine can still
represent an C++ or an ObjC method. I don't see anything in the
subprogram branch which should not apply to an inlined subroutine, so I
propose to just treat them identically. This makes searching for an
inlined method behave the same way as for the apple index.
I write an assembly-based test because I did not want to depend on
particular clang inlining behavior (and because I wanted to see how hard
would it be).
Reviewers: clayborg, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: eraman, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47368
llvm-svn: 333398
Now it's possible to set breakpoints before selecting a target, they
will be set to the dummy target and then copied to an each added one.
Patch by Alexander Polyakov!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46588
llvm-svn: 333205
Summary:
Implement FindGlobalVariables and ParseVariableContext methods.
Compile unit information is necessary for resolving variable context, however some PDB symbols do not have this information. For now an empty DWARFExpression is used to construct a lldb::Variable instance with the limitation that using lldb to lookup the value of a global or local variable is not available.
This commit may slow down lit/SymbolFile/PDB/compilands.test since the test includes MS specific modules that spend more time parsing variables.
Reviewers: rnk, zturner, lldb-commits
Subscribers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45224
llvm-svn: 333049
After closer examination, it turns out we mis-classify one of the
methods only if two of the structs have the same name. Since this was
meant to be a basic test, I rename one of the structs in the test so
that we have at least some coverage for the apple tables lookup.
Instead, I create an XFAILed test which specifically targets the
same-name case (and file a bug to track it).
llvm-svn: 332833
Summary:
Now that we are able to parse MachO files everywhere, we can write some
cross-platform tests for handling of apple accelerator tables. This
reruns the same lookup tests we have for manual indexes on MachO files
which will use the accelerator tables instead. This makes sure we return
the same results regardless of the method we used to access the debug
info.
The tests confirm we return the same results for looking up types,
namespaces and variables, but have found an inconsistency in the
treatment of function lookup. In the function case we mis-classify the
method "foo" declared in the local struct sbar (inside function ffbar).
We classify it as a function whereas it really is a method. Preliminary
analysis suggests this is because
DWARFASTParserClang::GetClangDeclContextForDIE returns null when given
the local "struct sbar" DIE. This causes us to get the wrong
CompilerDeclContext when we ask for the context of the inner foo, which
means CompilerDeclContext::ISStructUnionOrClass returns false.
Until this is fixed, I do not include the darwin versions of the "base"
and "method" function lookup tests.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg
Subscribers: aprantl, ilya-biryukov, ioeric, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47064
llvm-svn: 332831
Summary:
Before this patch we were unable to write cross-platform MachO tests
because the parsing code did not compile on other platforms. The reason
for that was that ObjectFileMachO depended on
RegisterContextDarwin_arm(64)? (presumably for core file parsing) and
the two Register Context classes uses constants from the system headers
(KERN_SUCCESS, KERN_INVALID_ARGUMENT).
As far as I can tell, these two files don't actually interact with the
darwin kernel -- they are used only in ObjectFileMachO and MacOSX-Kernel
process plugin (even though it has "kernel" in the name, this one
communicates with it via network packets and not syscalls). For the time
being I have created OS-independent definitions of these constants and
made the register context classes use those. Long term, the error
handling in these classes should be probably changed to use more
standard mechanisms such as Status or Error classes.
This is the only change necessary (apart from build system glue) to make
ObjectFileMachO work on other platforms. To demonstrate that, I remove
REQUIRES:darwin from our (only) cross-platform mach-o test.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, aprantl, clayborg, javed.absar
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46934
llvm-svn: 332702
Getting the deployment target can be significant information when
rebuilding clang modules since availability information could depend
on it.
rdar://problem/40039633
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46669
llvm-svn: 332067