DWARF5 spec describes a single file split dwarf case
(when .dwo sections are in the .o files).
Problem is that LLDB does not work correctly in that case.
The issue is that, for example, both .debug_info and .debug_info.dwo
has the same type: eSectionTypeDWARFDebugInfo. And when code searches
section by type it might find the regular debug section
and not the .dwo one.
The patch fixes that. With it, LLDB is able to work with
output compiled with -gsplit-dwarf=single flag correctly.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52296
llvm-svn: 346848
LC_BUILD_VERSION records are of variable length. The original code
would use uninitialized memory when the size of a record was exactly 24.
rdar://problem/46032185
llvm-svn: 346812
This patch removes the comments grouping header includes. They were
added after running IWYU over the LLDB codebase. However they add little
value, are often outdates and burdensome to maintain.
llvm-svn: 346626
This patch modifies how we open File instances in LLDB. Rather than
passing a path or FileSpec to the constructor, we now go through the
virtual file system. This is needed in order to make things work with
the VFS in the future.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54020
llvm-svn: 346049
Summary:
This patch adds possibility of searching a public symbol with name and type in a
symbol file. It is helpful when working with PE, because PE's symtabs contain
only imported / exported symbols only. Such a search is required for e.g.
evaluation of an expression that calls some function of the debuggee.
Reviewers: zturner, asmith, labath, clayborg, espindola
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: emaste, arichardson, aleksandr.urakov, jingham, lldb-commits, stella.stamenova
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53368
llvm-svn: 345957
This patch removes the logic for resolving paths out of FileSpec and
updates call sites to rely on the FileSystem class instead.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53915
llvm-svn: 345890
This patch removes the Exists method from FileSpec and updates its uses
with calls to the FileSystem.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53845
llvm-svn: 345854
This implements the support for .debug_loclists section, which is
DWARF 5 version of .debug_loc.
Currently, clang is able to emit it with the use of D53365.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53436
llvm-svn: 345016
LC_BUILD_VERSION load command handling - this
commit is a combination of patches by Adrian
Prantl and myself. llvm::Triple::BridgeOS
isn't defined yet, so all references to that
are currently commented out.
Also update Xcode project file to build the
NativePDB etc plugins.
<rdar://problem/43353615>
llvm-svn: 344209
This adds a basic support of the .debug_rnglists section.
Only the DW_RLE_start_length and DW_RLE_end_of_list entries are supported.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52981
llvm-svn: 344119
This patch improves the support of DWARF5.
Particularly the reporting of source code locations.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51935
llvm-svn: 342153
Summary:
One of the conclusions of the discussion on D49740 was that SafeMachO is better
off in the Host module (as that's the only place which should include
mach/machine.h, which is what this header is working around). Also, Utility,
which is the only module which cannot include Host, should not be doing
anything with object file formats.
This patch implements that move, and also removes any unneded includes of that
file.
I've verified that MacOS still compiles after this.
Reviewers: jingham, zturner, teemperor
Subscribers: fedor.sergeev, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50383
llvm-svn: 342050
reads an ObjectFileMachO's string table in one chunk. Originally
this was commented out because binaries in the system's shared cache
all share a mega-string table and so reading the entire mega-strtab
for each binary was a performance problem.
In the reinstated code, I add a check that the binary we're reading
from memory is not in the shared cache (there isn't a constant in
<mach-o/loader.h> for this bit yet; we hardcode the value in one
other place in ObjectFileMachO alread). For binaries that we're
reading out of memory that are NOT in the shared cache, reading
the string table in one chunk is a big performance improvement.
Also have debugserver send up the flags value for binaries in its
response to the jGetLoadedDynamicLibrariesInfos request.
NFC.
<rdar://problem/33604496>
llvm-svn: 341511
when we have only an in-memory copy of the binary.
Also added a test for the generation of these symbols in the
in-memory and regular cases.
<rdar://problem/43160401>
llvm-svn: 339833
These three classes have no external dependencies, but they are used
from various low-level APIs. Moving them down to Utility improves
overall code layering (although it still does not break any particular
dependency completely).
The XCode project will need to be updated after this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49740
llvm-svn: 339127
Summary:
During the previous attempt to generalize the UUID class, it was
suggested that we represent invalid UUIDs as length zero (previously, we
used an all-zero UUID for that). This meant that some valid build-ids
could not be represented (it's possible however unlikely that a checksum of
some file would be zero) and complicated adding support for variable
length build-ids (should a 16-byte empty UUID compare equal to a 20-byte
empty UUID?).
This patch resolves these issues by introducing a canonical
representation for an invalid UUID. The slight complication here is that
some clients (MachO) actually use the all-zero notation to mean "no UUID
has been set". To keep this use case working (while making it very
explicit about which construction semantices are wanted), replaced the
UUID constructors and the SetBytes functions with named factory methods.
- "fromData" creates a UUID from the given data, and it treats all bytes
equally.
- "fromOptionalData" first checks the data contents - if all bytes are
zero, it treats this as an invalid/empty UUID.
Reviewers: clayborg, sas, lemo, davide, espindola
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits, arichardson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48479
llvm-svn: 335612
If we have a function with signature f(addr_t, AddressClass), it is easy to muddle up the order of arguments without any warnings from compiler. 'enum class' prevents passing integer in place of AddressClass and vice versa.
llvm-svn: 335599
This method does one of two things:
1. finds a minimum os deployment version # in a Mach-O load
command and saves the three parts in the m_sdk_version, or
2. finds no valid min os version # load command, pushes a
sentinel value on the m_sdk_version vector so we don't search
the same load commands multiple times.
There was a little bug when we found a load command with
a version of 0.0.0 - the method would not add anything to
the m_sdk_version vector but would declare that a success.
It would not push the sentinel value to the vector.
There was code later in the method which assumed that
the vector always had a sentinel value, at least, and that
code could crash when this method was called back when
evaluating a Swift expression. (these version #'s are
fetched lazily so it wouldn't happen when the object file
was parsed, only when doing an expression that needed
the version #).
<rdar://problem/41372699>
llvm-svn: 335556
Summary:
This has multiple advantages:
- we need only one function argument/instance variable instead of three
- no need to default initialize variables
- no custom parsing code
- VersionTuple has comparison operators, which makes version comparisons much
simpler
Reviewers: zturner, friss, clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47889
llvm-svn: 334950
SetFile has an optional style argument which defaulted to the native
style. This patch makes that argument mandatory so clients of the
FileSpec class are forced to think about the correct syntax.
At the same time this introduces a (protected) convenience method to
update the file from within the FileSpec class that keeps the current
style.
These two changes together prevent a potential pitfall where the style
might be forgotten, leading to the path being updated and the style
unintentionally being changed to the host style.
llvm-svn: 334663
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
In an effort to make the .debug_types patch smaller, breaking out the part that reads the .debug_types from object files into a separate patch
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46529
llvm-svn: 331777
when it and the inferior process both have the same shared cache
(a conglomeration of all libraries at the same fixed address for
all processes), lldb will read data out of its own memory to speed
things up. The shared cache has a UUID, so lldb currently checks
that the UUID of its own shared cache matches that of the inferior.
This change adds one refinement to that -- it checks that the UUID
is the same and that the base address of the shared cache is the
same. And only uses its local shared cache if they are both identical.
This involved using a different style of SPI with dyld to get lldb's
shared cache load address, but it's not especially difficult.
One unattractive part of the change is that I'm using the real
underlying types of task_t and kern_return_t instead of picking
them up from mach/mach.h. The defines that get picked up there (a
lot from machine.h but others too) conflict with llvm/Support/MachO.h
even when I have mach.h included before our SafeMachO.h which
undefines most of the defines before including llvm/Support/MachO.h.
I'll need to augment the #undefs in SafeMachO.h to get this to
compile cleanly, but that'll be another day.
<rdar://problem/39868238>
llvm-svn: 331497
This is intended as a clean up after the big clang-format commit
(r280751), which unfortunately resulted in many of the comment
paragraphs in LLDB being very hard to read.
FYI, the script I used was:
import textwrap
import commands
import os
import sys
import re
tmp = "%s.tmp"%sys.argv[1]
out = open(tmp, "w+")
with open(sys.argv[1], "r") as f:
header = ""
text = ""
comment = re.compile(r'^( *//) ([^ ].*)$')
special = re.compile(r'^((([A-Z]+[: ])|([0-9]+ )).*)|(.*;)$')
for line in f:
match = comment.match(line)
if match and not special.match(match.group(2)):
# skip intentionally short comments.
if not text and len(match.group(2)) < 40:
out.write(line)
continue
if text:
text += " " + match.group(2)
else:
header = match.group(1)
text = match.group(2)
continue
if text:
filled = textwrap.wrap(text, width=(78-len(header)),
break_long_words=False)
for l in filled:
out.write(header+" "+l+'\n')
text = ""
out.write(line)
os.rename(tmp, sys.argv[1])
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46144
llvm-svn: 331197
Always normalizing lldb_private::FileSpec paths will help us get a consistent results from comparisons when setting breakpoints and when looking for source files. This also removes a lot of complexity from the comparison routines. Modified the DWARF line table parser to use the normalized compile unit directory if needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45977
llvm-svn: 331049
Summary:
In an effort to understand the function's operation, I've split it into logical
pieces. Parsing of a single segment is moved to a separate function (and the
parsing state that is carried from one segment to another is explicitly
captured in the SegmentParsingContext object). I've also extracted some pieces
of code which were already standalone (validation of the segment load command,
determining the section type, determining segment permissions) into
separate functions.
Parsing of a single section within the segment should probably also be a
separate function, but I've left that for a separate patch.
This patch is intended to be NFC.
Reviewers: clayborg, davide
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44074
llvm-svn: 326791
SPI call to to find its own shared cache's UUID. On newer sytems we
need to use the a new SPI which will return the UUID directly.
<rdar://problem/36625871>
llvm-svn: 324437
This patch is the result of a discussion on lldb-dev, see
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2018-January/013111.html for
background.
For each test (should be eventually: each test configuration) a
separate build directory is created and we execute
make VPATH=$srcdir/path/to/test -C $builddir/path/to/test -f $srcdir/path/to/test/Makefile -I $srcdir/path/to/test
In order to make this work all LLDB tests need to be updated to find
the executable in the test build directory, since CWD still points at
the test's source directory, which is a requirement for unittest2.
Although we have done extensive testing, I'm expecting that this first
attempt will break a few bots. Please DO NOT HESITATE TO REVERT this
patch in order to get the bots green again. We will likely have to
iterate on this some more.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42281
llvm-svn: 323803
Summary:
We sometimes need to write to the object file we've mapped into memory,
generally to apply relocations to debug info sections. We've had that
ability before, but with the introduction of DataBufferLLVM, we have
lost it, as the underlying llvm class (MemoryBuffer) only supports
read-only mappings.
This switches DataBufferLLVM to use the new llvm::WritableMemoryBuffer
class as a back-end, as this one guarantees to return a writable buffer.
This removes the need for the "Private" flag to the DataBufferLLVM
creation functions, as it was really used to mean "writable". The LLVM
function also does not have the NullTerminate flag, so I've modified our
clients to not require this feature and removed that flag as well.
Reviewers: zturner, clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: emaste, aprantl, arichardson, krytarowski, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40079
llvm-svn: 321255
so it has the same padding as the kernel's definition
which is written in terms of uint128_t. Original patch
by Ryan Mansfield.
<rdar://problem/35468499>
llvm-svn: 318357
break. The alignas(__uint128_t) is not recognized with MSVC
it looks like. Zachary, is there a similar type on windows?
I suppose I can go with alignas(16) here but I'd prefer to
specify the type alignment that I want & let the ABI dictate
how much padding is required.
llvm-svn: 318262
The rationale here is that ArchSpec is used throughout the codebase,
including in places which should not depend on the rest of the code in
the Core module.
This commit touches many files, but most of it is just renaming of
#include lines. In a couple of cases, I removed the #include ArchSpec
line altogether, as the file was not using it. In one or two places,
this necessitated adding other #includes like lldb-private-defines.h.
llvm-svn: 318048
Summary:
The DWP (DWARF package) format is used to pack multiple dwo files
generated by split-dwarf into a single ELF file to make distributing
them easier. It is part of the DWARFv5 spec and can be generated by
dwp or llvm-dwp from a set of dwo files.
Caviats:
* Only the new version of the dwp format is supported (v2 in GNU
numbering schema and v5 in the DWARF spec). The old version (v1) is
already deprecated but binutils 2.24 still generates that one.
* Combining DWP files with module debugging is not yet supported.
Subscribers: emaste, mgorny, aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36062
llvm-svn: 311775
Summary:
The classes have no dependencies, and they are used both by lldb and
lldb-server, so it makes sense for them to live in the lowest layers.
Reviewers: zturner, jingham
Subscribers: emaste, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34746
llvm-svn: 306682
Summary:
instead of using a boolean to differentiate between the two section
types, use an enum to make the intent clearer.
I also remove the RegisterKind argument from the constructor, as this
can be deduced from the Type argument.
Reviewers: clayborg, jasonmolenda
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34681
llvm-svn: 306521
The Timer destructor would grab a global mutex in order to update
execution time. Add a class to define a category once, statically; the
class adds itself to an atomic singly linked list, and thus subsequent
updates only need to use an atomic rather than grab a lock and perform a
hashtable lookup.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32823
Patch by Scott Smith <scott.smith@purestorage.com>.
llvm-svn: 303058
This renames the LLDB error class to Status, as discussed
on the lldb-dev mailing list.
A change of this magnitude cannot easily be done without
find and replace, but that has potential to catch unwanted
occurrences of common strings such as "Error". Every effort
was made to find all the obvious things such as the word "Error"
appearing in a string, etc, but it's possible there are still
some lingering occurences left around. Hopefully nothing too
serious.
llvm-svn: 302872
lldb should use when given a corefile.
This uses an LC_NOTE "main bin spec" or an LC_NOTE "kern ver str"
if they are present in a Mach-O core file.
Core files may have multiple different binaries -- different kernels,
or a mix of user process and kernel binaries -- and it can be
difficult for lldb to detect the correct one to use simply by looking
at the pages of memory. These two new LC_NOTE load commands allow
for the correct binary to be recorded unambiguously.
<rdar://problem/20878266>
llvm-svn: 300138
This adjusts header file includes for headers and source files
in Core. In doing so, one dependency cycle is eliminated
because all the includes from Core to that project were dead
includes anyway. In places where some files in other projects
were only compiling due to a transitive include from another
header, fixups have been made so that those files also include
the header they need. Tested on Windows and Linux, and plan
to address failures on OSX and FreeBSD after watching the
bots.
llvm-svn: 299714
Only do this when we are debugging an executable, since we
don't have a good way to trace from an ObjectFile back to its
containing executable. Detecting pre-run libs before running
is "best effort" in lldb, but this one is pretty easy.
llvm-svn: 298290
This functionality is subsumed by DataBufferLLVM, which is
also more efficient since it will try to mmap. However, we
don't yet support mmaping writable private sections, and in
some cases we were using ReadFileContents and then modifying
the buffer. To address that I've added a flag to the
DataBufferLLVM methods that allow you to map privately, which
disables the mmaping path entirely. Eventually we should teach
DataBufferLLVM to use mmap with writable private, but that is
orthogonal to this effort.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30622
llvm-svn: 297095
All references to Host and Core have been removed, so this
class can now safely be lowered into Utility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30559
llvm-svn: 296909
After a series of patches on the LLVM side to get the mmaping
code up to compatibility with LLDB's needs, it is now ready
to go, which means LLDB's custom mmapping code is redundant.
So this patch deletes it all and uses LLVM's code instead.
In the future, we could take this one step further and delete
even the lldb DataBuffer base class and rely entirely on
LLVM's facilities, but this is a job for another day.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30054
llvm-svn: 296159
This moves the following classes from Core -> Utility.
ConstString
Error
RegularExpression
Stream
StreamString
The goal here is to get lldbUtility into a state where it has
no dependendencies except on itself and LLVM, so it can be the
starting point at which to start untangling LLDB's dependencies.
These are all low level and very widely used classes, and
previously lldbUtility had dependencies up to lldbCore in order
to use these classes. So moving then down to lldbUtility makes
sense from both the short term and long term perspective in
solving this problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29427
llvm-svn: 293941
This is a large API change that removes the two functions from
StreamString that return a std::string& and a const std::string&,
and instead provide one function which returns a StringRef.
Direct access to the underlying buffer violates the concept of
a "stream" which is intended to provide forward only access,
and makes porting to llvm::raw_ostream more difficult in the
future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26698
llvm-svn: 287152
We shouldn't access past the end of an array, even if we think that the
layout of the struct containing the array is always what we expect. The
compiler is free to optimize away the stores as undefined behavior, and
in fact, GCC 6.2.1 claims it will do exactly this.
llvm-svn: 286093
Summary:
.. handling for windows path was completely broken because the function was
expecting \ as path separators, but we were passing it normalized file paths,
where these have been replaced by forward slashes. Apart from this, the function
was incorrect for posix paths as well in some corner cases, as well as being
generally hard to follow.
The corner cases were:
- /../bar -> should be same as /bar
- /bar/.. -> should be same as / (slightly dodgy as the former depends on /bar actually
existing, but since we're doing it in an abstract way, I think the
transformation is reasonable)
I rewrite the function to fix these corner cases and handle windows paths more
correctly. The function should now handle the posix paths (modulo symlinks, but
we cannot really do anything about that without a real filesystem). For windows
paths, there are a couple of corner cases left, mostly to do with drive letter
handling, which cannot be fixed until the rest of the class understands drive
letters better.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26081
llvm-svn: 285593
Summary:
It fixes the following compile warnings:
1. '0' flag ignored with precision and ‘%d’ gnu_printf format
2. enumeral and non-enumeral type in conditional expression
3. format ‘%d’ expects argument of type ‘int’, but argument 4 has type ...
4. enumeration value ‘...’ not handled in switch
5. cast from type ‘const uint64_t* {aka ...}’ to type ‘int64_t* {aka ...}’ casts away qualifiers
6. extra ‘;’
7. comparison between signed and unsigned integer expressions
8. variable ‘register_operand’ set but not used
9. control reaches end of non-void function
Reviewers: jingham, emaste, zturner, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24331
llvm-svn: 281191
*** to conform to clang-format’s LLVM style. This kind of mass change has
*** two obvious implications:
Firstly, merging this particular commit into a downstream fork may be a huge
effort. Alternatively, it may be worth merging all changes up to this commit,
performing the same reformatting operation locally, and then discarding the
merge for this particular commit. The commands used to accomplish this
reformatting were as follows (with current working directory as the root of
the repository):
find . \( -iname "*.c" -or -iname "*.cpp" -or -iname "*.h" -or -iname "*.mm" \) -exec clang-format -i {} +
find . -iname "*.py" -exec autopep8 --in-place --aggressive --aggressive {} + ;
The version of clang-format used was 3.9.0, and autopep8 was 1.2.4.
Secondly, “blame” style tools will generally point to this commit instead of
a meaningful prior commit. There are alternatives available that will attempt
to look through this change and find the appropriate prior commit. YMMV.
llvm-svn: 280751
and we couldn't find a dyld binary on the debug system, override
that setting and read dyld out of memory - we need to put an
internal breakpoint on dyld to register binaries being loaded or
unloaded; the debugger won't work right without dyld symbols.
<rdar://problem/27857025>
llvm-svn: 279704
It's always hard to remember when to include this file, and
when you do include it it's hard to remember what preprocessor
check it needs to be behind, and then you further have to remember
whether it's windows.h or win32.h which you need to include.
This patch changes the name to PosixApi.h, which is more appropriately
named, and makes it independent of any preprocessor setting.
There's still the issue of people not knowing when to include this,
because there's not a well-defined set of things it exposes other
than "whatever is missing on Windows", but at least this should
make it less painful to fix when problems arise.
This patch depends on LLVM revision r278170.
llvm-svn: 278177
cache from ObjectFileMachO (very wrong place) to the DynamicLoader
plugins (better place). Not much change to the code itself, although
the old ObjectFileMachO method would try both the new dyld SPI and
reading the dyld_all_image_infos structure. In the new methods,
I've separated those into the appropriate DynamicLoader plugins.
llvm-svn: 277088
debugserver jGetSharedCacheInfo packet instead of reading
the dyld internal data structures directly. This code is
(currently) only used for ios native lldb's - I should really
move this ObjectFileMachO::GetProcessSharedCacheUUID method
somewhere else, it makes less and less sense being in the
file reader.
<rdar://problem/25251243>
llvm-svn: 276369
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
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
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
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
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
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
Most address represented in lldb as section plus offset and handling of
absolute addresses is problematic in several location because of lack
of necessary information (e.g. Target) or because of performance issues.
This CL change the way ObjectFileELF handle the absolute symbols with
creating a pseudo section for each symbol. With this change all existing
code designed to work with addresses in the form of section plus offset
will work with absolute symbols as well.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17450
llvm-svn: 261859
* Generate artificial symbol names from eh_fame during symbol parsing
so these symbols are already present when we calcualte the size of
the symbols where 0 is specified.
* Fix symbol size calculation for the last symbol in the file where
it have to last until the end of the parent section.
This is the re-commit of the original change after fixing some test
failures on OSX.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16996
llvm-svn: 261205
the xcode project file to catch switch statements that have a
case that falls through unintentionally.
Define LLVM_FALLTHROUGH to indicate instances where a case has code
and intends to fall through. This should be in llvm/Support/Compiler.h;
Peter Collingbourne originally checked in there (r237766), then
reverted (r237941) because he didn't have time to mark up all the
'case' statements that were intended to fall through. I put together
a patch to get this back in llvm http://reviews.llvm.org/D17063 but
it hasn't been approved in the past week. I added a new
lldb-private-defines.h to hold the definition for now.
Every place in lldb where there is a comment that the fall-through
is intentional, I added LLVM_FALLTHROUGH to silence the warning.
I haven't tried to identify whether the fallthrough is a bug or
not in the other places.
I haven't tried to add this to the cmake option build flags.
This warning will only work for clang.
This build cleanly (with some new warnings) on macosx with clang
under xcodebuild, but if this causes problems for people on other
configurations, I'll back it out.
llvm-svn: 260930
* Generate artificial symbol names from eh_fame during symbol parsing
so these symbols are already present when we calcualte the size of
the symbols where 0 is specified.
* Fix symbol size calculation for the last symbol in the file where
it have to last until the end of the parent section.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16996
llvm-svn: 260369
The file contained very similar 4 implementation of the same data
structure with a lot of duplicated code and some minor API differences.
This CL refactor the class to eliminate the duplicated codes and to
unify the APIs.
RangeMap.h also contained a class called AddressDataArray what have very
little added functionality over an std::vector and used only by
ObjectFileMacO The CL moves the class to ObjectFileMachO.cpp as it isn't
belongs into RangeMap.h and shouldn't be used in new places anyway
because of the little added functionality.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16769
llvm-svn: 259538
set the triple's "vendor" field to Apple.
We don't want to assume a vendor of Apple for all Mach-O files -
this breaks x86_64 EFI debugging where they put non-Apple binaries
in a Mach-O format for ease of handling.
But on armv7, Apple's ABI always uses r7 as the frame pointer
register; if we don't set the Vendor field to Apple, we can pick
up a generic armv7 ABI where the fp is r11 (or r7 for thumb) which
breaks backtracing altogether.
Greg is reluctant for us to make any assumptions about the Vendor
here, but we'll see how this shakes out. It's such a big problem
on armv7 if we don't know this is using the Apple ABI that it's worth
trying this approach.
<rdar://problem/22137561>
llvm-svn: 258387
register set indicated by ARM_THREAD_STATE32 (value 9) instead of
the old ARM_THREAD_STATE (value 1); this patch changes lldb to
accept either register set flavor code.
<rdar://problem/24246257>
llvm-svn: 258289
Summary:
DWARF 5 proposes a reinvented .debug_macro section. This change follows
that spec.
Currently, only GCC produces the .debug_macro section and hence
the added test is annottated with expectedFailureClang.
Reviewers: spyffe, clayborg, tberghammer
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15437
llvm-svn: 255729
Summary:
Since this is within the lldb namespace, the compiler tries to
export a symbol for it. Unfortunately, since it is inlined, the
symbol is hidden and this results in a mess of warnings when
building on OS X with cmake.
Moving it to the lldb_private namespace eliminates that problem.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14417
llvm-svn: 252396
.ARM.exidx/.ARM.extab sections contain unwind information used on ARM
architecture from unwinding from an exception.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13245
llvm-svn: 248903
The Go runtime schedules user level threads (goroutines) across real threads.
This adds an OS plugin to create memory threads for goroutines.
It supports the 1.4 and 1.5 go runtime.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5871
llvm-svn: 247852
These are 2 new value currently in experimental status used when split
debug info is enabled.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12238
llvm-svn: 245931
Create a new "lldb_private::CompilerDeclContext" class that will replace all direct uses of "clang::DeclContext" when used in compiler agnostic code, yet still allow for conversion to clang::DeclContext subclasses by clang specific code. This completes the abstraction of type parsing by removing all "clang::" references from the SymbolFileDWARF. The new "lldb_private::CompilerDeclContext" class abstracts decl contexts found in compiler type systems so they can be used in internal API calls. The TypeSystem is required to support CompilerDeclContexts with new pure virtual functions that start with "DeclContext" in the member function names. Converted all code that used lldb_private::ClangNamespaceDecl over to use the new CompilerDeclContext class and removed the ClangNamespaceDecl.cpp and ClangNamespaceDecl.h files.
Removed direct use of clang APIs from SBType and now use the abstract type systems to correctly explore types.
Bulk renames for things that used to return a ClangASTType which is now CompilerType:
"Type::GetClangFullType()" to "Type::GetFullCompilerType()"
"Type::GetClangLayoutType()" to "Type::GetLayoutCompilerType()"
"Type::GetClangForwardType()" to "Type::GetForwardCompilerType()"
"Value::GetClangType()" to "Value::GetCompilerType()"
"Value::SetClangType (const CompilerType &)" to "Value::SetCompilerType (const CompilerType &)"
"ValueObject::GetClangType ()" to "ValueObject::GetCompilerType()"
many more renames that are similar.
llvm-svn: 245905
This was breaking disassembly for arm machines that we force to be
thumb mode all the time because we were only checking for llvm::Triple::arm.
i.e.
armv6m (ARM Cortex-M0)
armv7m (ARM Cortex-M3)
armv7em (ARM Cortex-M4)
<rdar://problem/22334522>
llvm-svn: 245645
for eh_frame and stabs register numberings. This is not
complete but it's a step in the right direction. It's almost
entirely mechanical.
lldb informally uses "gcc register numbering" to mean eh_frame.
Why? Probably because there's a notorious bug with gcc on i386
darwin where the register numbers in eh_frame were incorrect.
In all other cases, eh_frame register numbering is identical to
dwarf.
lldb informally uses "gdb register numbering" to mean stabs.
There are no official definitions of stabs register numbers
for different architectures, so the implementations of gdb
and gcc are the de facto reference source.
There were some incorrect uses of these register number types
in lldb already. I fixed the ones that I saw as I made
this change.
This commit changes all references to "gcc" and "gdb" register
numbers in lldb to "eh_frame" and "stabs" to make it clear
what is actually being represented.
lldb cannot parse the stabs debug format, and given that no
one is using stabs any more, it is unlikely that it ever will.
A more comprehensive cleanup would remove the stabs register
numbers altogether - it's unnecessary cruft / complication to
all of our register structures.
In ProcessGDBRemote, when we get register definitions from
the gdb-remote stub, we expect to see "gcc:" (qRegisterInfo)
or "gcc_regnum" (qXfer:features:read: packet to get xml payload).
This patch changes ProcessGDBRemote to also accept "ehframe:"
and "ehframe_regnum" from these remotes.
I did not change GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS or debugserver
to send these new packets. I don't know what kind of interoperability
constraints we might be working under. At some point in the future
we should transition to using the more descriptive names.
Throughout lldb we're still using enum names like "gcc_r0" and "gdb_r0",
for eh_frame and stabs register numberings. These should be cleaned
up eventually too.
The sources link cleanly on macosx native with xcode build. I
don't think we'll see problems on other platforms but please let
me know if I broke anyone.
llvm-svn: 245141
Whatever problem I saw that caused me to disable this
initially is not a problem today.
<rdar://problem/21173317>
<rdar://problem/20266253>
llvm-svn: 240737
A few extras were fixed
- Symbol::GetAddress() now returns an Address object, not a reference. There were places where people were accessing the address of a symbol when the symbol's value wasn't an address symbol. On MacOSX, undefined symbols have a value zero and some places where using the symbol's address and getting an absolute address of zero (since an Address object with no section and an m_offset whose value isn't LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS is considered an absolute address). So fixing this required some changes to make sure people were getting what they expected.
- Since some places want to access the address as a reference, I added a few new functions to symbol:
Address &Symbol::GetAddressRef();
const Address &Symbol::GetAddressRef() const;
Linux test suite passes just fine now.
<rdar://problem/21494354>
llvm-svn: 240702
So that we don't have to update every single #include in the entire
codebase to #include this new header (which used to get included by
lldb-private-log.h, we automatically #include "Logging.h" from
within "Log.h".
llvm-svn: 232653
This is implemented by making a new FileSystem function:
bool
FileSystem::IsLocal(const FileSpec &spec)
Then using this in a new function:
DataBufferSP
FileSpec::MemoryMapFileContentsIfLocal(off_t file_offset, size_t file_size) const;
This function only mmaps data if the file is a local file since that means we can reliably page in data. We were experiencing crashes where people would use debug info files on network mounted file systems and that mount would go away and cause the next access to a page that wasn't paged in to crash LLDB.
We now avoid this by just copying the data into a heap buffer and keeping a permanent copy to avoid the crash. Updated all previous users of FileSpec::MemoryMapFileContentsIfLocal() in ObjectFile subclasses over to use the new FileSpec::MemoryMapFileContentsIfLocal() function.
<rdar://problem/19470249>
llvm-svn: 230283
Background: dyld binaries often have extra symbols in their symbol table like "malloc" and "free" for the early bringup of dyld and we often don't want to set breakpoints in dynamic linker binaries. We also don't want to call the "malloc" or "free" function in dyld when a user writes an expression like "(void *)malloc(123)" so we need to avoid doing name lookups in dyld. We mark Modules as being dynamic link editors and this helps do correct lookups for breakpoints by name and function lookups.
<rdar://problem/19716267>
llvm-svn: 228261
section for x86_64 and i386 targets on Darwin systems. Currently only the
compact unwind encoding for normal frame-using functions is supported but it
will be easy handle frameless functions when I have a bit more free time to
test it. The LSDA and personality routines for functions are also retrieved
correctly for functions from the compact unwind section.
This new code is very fresh -- it passes the lldb testsuite and I've done
by-hand inspection of many functions and am getting correct behavior for all
of them. There may need to be some bug fixing over the next couple weeks as
I exercise and test it further. But I think it's fine right now so I'm
committing it.
<rdar://problem/13220837>
llvm-svn: 223625
ObjectFileMachO. It's close but we seem to be missing some
of the memory region segments - not exactly sure how that's
happening. The register context writing into the LC_THREAD
load commands is working correctly though.
Slightly reordered the arm64 definitions in ArchSpec.cpp so
when we look for an arm64 core file definiton we're getting
a cpu subtype of CPU_ANY which we can't put in the mach
header of a core file. Make the first definition we find by
linear search have the currently correct '1' cpu subtype.
llvm-svn: 221743
with binaries in the dyld shared cache (esp on iOS) where the file
address for the executable binary (maybe from memory, maybe from
an expanded copy of the dyld shared cache) is different from the
file address in the dSYM. In that case, ObjectFileMachO replaces
the file addresses from the original binary with the dSYM file
addresses (usually 0-based) -- lldb doesn't have a notion of two
file addresses for a given module so they need to agree.
There was a cache of file addresses over in the Symtab so I added
a method to the Module and the objects within to clear any file address
caches if they exist, and added an implementation in the Symtab
module to do that.
<rdar://problem/16929569>
llvm-svn: 216258
File::SeekFromStart returns an off_t representing the position of the
file after seeking. This return value is always going to be one of two
values: the input or -1 in the case of failure.
ObjectFileMachO compares an expression of type off_t from the return of
File::SeekFromStart(segment.fileoff) and compares it for equality with
segment.fileoff.
The type of segment_command_64::fileoff is unsigned while off_t is
signed, comparing them emits a diagnostic under GCC.
Instead, we can just compare SeekFromSTart with -1 to see if we
successfully seeked.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4634
llvm-svn: 213822
GCC emits a warning:
warning: enumeral and non-enumeral type in conditional expression [enabled by default]
which does not seem to have a flag to control it. Simply add an explicit cast
for the boolean value.
llvm-svn: 213715
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
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
Address the 'variable set but not used' warning from GCC. In some cases a few
additional calls were removed where there should be no visible side effects of
the calls (i.e. should not effect any cached state).
llvm-svn: 210879
(lldb) file /bin/ls
(lldb) b malloc
(lldb) run
(lldb) process save-core /tmp/ls.core
Each ObjectFile plug-in now has the option to save core files by registering a new static callback.
llvm-svn: 210864
Changes include:
- ObjectFileMachO can now determine if a binary is "*-apple-ios" or "*-apple-macosx" by checking the min OS and SDK load commands
- ArchSpec now says "<arch>-apple-macosx" is equivalent to "<arch>-apple-ios" since the simulator mixes and matches binaries (some from the system and most from the iOS SDK).
- Getting process inforamtion on MacOSX now correctly classifies iOS simulator processes so they have "*-apple-ios" architectures in the ProcessInstanceInfo
- PlatformiOSSimulator can now list iOS simulator processes correctly instead of showing nothing by using:
(lldb) platform select ios-simulator
(lldb) platform process list
- debugserver can now properly return "*-apple-ios" for the triple in the process info packets for iOS simulator executables
- GDBRemoteCommunicationClient now correctly passes along the triples it gets for process info by setting the OS in the llvm::Triple correctly
<rdar://problem/17060217>
llvm-svn: 209852
This is a purely mechanical change explicitly casting any parameters for printf
style conversion. This cleans up the warnings emitted by gcc 4.8 on Linux.
llvm-svn: 205607
This is a mechanical change addressing the various sign comparison warnings that
are identified by both clang and gcc. This helps cleanup some of the warning
spew that occurs during builds.
llvm-svn: 205390
These changes were written by Greg Clayton, Jim Ingham, Jason Molenda.
It builds cleanly against TOT llvm with xcodebuild. I updated the
cmake files by visual inspection but did not try a build. I haven't
built these sources on any non-Mac platforms - I don't think this
patch adds any code that requires darwin, but please let me know if
I missed something.
In debugserver, MachProcess.cpp and MachTask.cpp were renamed to
MachProcess.mm and MachTask.mm as they picked up some new Objective-C
code needed to launch processes when running on iOS.
llvm-svn: 205113
ObjectFile::SetLoadAddress (Target &target,
lldb::addr_t value,
bool value_is_offset);
Now "value" is a slide if "value_is_offset" is true, and "value" is an image base address otherwise. All previous usage of this API was using slides.
Updated the ObjectFileELF and ObjectFileMachO SetLoadAddress methods to do the right thing.
Also updated the ObjectFileMachO::SetLoadAddress() function to not load __LINKEDIT when it isn't needed and to only load sections that belong to the executable object file.
llvm-svn: 201003
Fixed an issue with reexported symbols on MacOSX by adding support for symbols re-exporting symbols. There is now a new symbol type eSymbolTypeReExported which contains a new name for the re-exported symbol and the new shared library. These symbols are only used when a symbol is re-exported as a symbol under a different name.
Modified the expression parser to be able to deal with finding the re-exported symbols and track down the actual symbol it refers to.
llvm-svn: 193101
Fixed Module::ResolveSymbolContextForAddress() to be able to also look in the SymbolVendor's SymbolFile's ObjectFile for a more meaningful symbol when a symbol lookup finds a synthetic symbol from the main object file. This will help lookups on MacOSX as the main executable might be stripped, but the dSYM file always has a full symbol table.
llvm-svn: 192510
and a mach kernel in all the pages of the core file. If it finds
a user-process dyld binary, assume this is a user process that had
a copy of the mach kernel in memory when it crashed (e.g. lldb doing
kernel debugging) even though we found the kernel binary first.
Also, change the error messages about sections extending past the end
of the file to be warnings and make the messages sound less severe.
Most user process core files have one section that isn't included in
the file and there's no reason to worry people about that.
<rdar://problem/14473235>
llvm-svn: 190741
out of a binary, if the Mach-O binary is MH_PRELOAD ("standalone"), don't
let the OS be set to "ios" or "macosx" - there will be no dynamic loader
used when debugging this process.
<rdar://problem/9956443>
llvm-svn: 189305
address.
When loading a dSYM, and the file addresses of the dSYM Sections are
different than the executable binary Sections' file addresses, the
debug info won't be remapped to the actual load addresses correctly.
This only happens with binaries on the in-memory shared cache binaries
where their File addresses have been set to their actual load address
(outside an offset value) whereas the original executable and dSYM
have 0-based File addresses.
I think this patch will not be activated for other cases -- this is
the only case we know of where the dSYM and the executable's File
addresses differ -- but if this causes other problems we can restrict
it more carefully.
<rdar://problem/12335086>
llvm-svn: 188532
Improve the documentation for the new target.memory-module-load-level setting, and also return an error when there is no nlist data when appropriate.
llvm-svn: 188317
LLDB needs in memory module load level settings to control how much information is read from memory when loading in memory modules. This change adds a new setting:
(lldb) settings set target.memory-module-load-level [minimal|partial|complete]
minimal will load only sections (no symbols, or function bounds via function starts or EH frame)
partial will load sections + bounds
complete will load sections + bounds + symbols
llvm-svn: 188246
- MachO files now correctly extract the UUID all the time
- More file size and offset verification done for universal mach-o files to watch for truncated files
- ObjectContainerBSDArchive now supports enumerating all objects in BSD archives (.a files)
- lldb_private::Module() can not be properly constructed using a ModuleSpec for a .o file in a .a file
- The BSD archive plug-in shares its cache for GetModuleSpecifications() and the create callback
- Improved printing for ModuleSpec objects
llvm-svn: 186211
- ObjectFile::GetSymtab() and ObjectFile::ClearSymtab() no longer takes any flags
- Module coordinates with the object files and contain a unified section list so that object file and symbol file can share sections when they need to, yet contain their own sections.
Other cleanups:
- Fixed Symbol::GetByteSize() to not have the symbol table compute the byte sizes on the fly
- Modified the ObjectFileMachO class to compute symbol sizes all at once efficiently
- Modified the Symtab class to store a file address lookup table for more efficient lookups
- Removed Section::Finalize() and SectionList::Finalize() as they did nothing
- Improved performance of the detection of symbol files that have debug maps by excluding stripped files and core files, debug files, object files and stubs
- Added the ability to tell if an ObjectFile has been stripped with ObjectFile::IsStripped() (used this for the above performance improvement)
llvm-svn: 185990
Accept mach-o files with bad segments. Many core files are not created correctly and we should still be able to glean any information we can from them.
llvm-svn: 183247
Fixed "target symbols add" to correctly extract all module specifications from a dSYM file that is supplied and match the symbol file to a current target module using the UUID values if they are available.
This fixes the case where you add a dSYM file (like "foo.dSYM") which is for a renamed executable (like "bar"). In our case it was "mach_kernel.dSYM" which didn't match "mach_kernel.sys".
llvm-svn: 181916
Combine N_GSYM stab entries with their non-stab counterpart (data symbols) to make the symbol table smaller with less duplicate named symbols.
llvm-svn: 181841
Most importantly, have DoReadGPR/DoReadFPU/DoReadEXC return -1
to indicate failure if they're called. Else these could override
the Error setting for the relevant thread state -- if the core file
didn't include a floating point thread state, for instance, these
functions would clear the Error setting for that register set and
lldb would display random bytes as those registers' contents.
<rdar://problem/13665075>
llvm-svn: 181757
<rdar://problem/13594769>
Main changes in this patch include:
- cleanup plug-in interface and use ConstStrings for plug-in names
- Modfiied the BSD Archive plug-in to be able to pick out the correct .o file when .a files contain multiple .o files with the same name by using the timestamp
- Modified SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap to properly verify the timestamp on .o files it loads to ensure we don't load updated .o files and cause problems when debugging
The plug-in interface changes:
Modified the lldb_private::PluginInterface class that all plug-ins inherit from:
Changed:
virtual const char * GetPluginName() = 0;
To:
virtual ConstString GetPluginName() = 0;
Removed:
virtual const char * GetShortPluginName() = 0;
- Fixed up all plug-in to adhere to the new interface and to return lldb_private::ConstString values for the plug-in names.
- Fixed all plug-ins to return simple names with no prefixes. Some plug-ins had prefixes and most ones didn't, so now they all don't have prefixed names, just simple names like "linux", "gdb-remote", etc.
llvm-svn: 181631
std::string
Module::GetSpecificationDescription () const;
This returns the module as "/usr/lib/libfoo.dylib" for normal files (calls "std::string FileSpec::GetPath()" on m_file) but it also might include the object name in case the module is for a .o file in a BSD archive ("/usr/lib/libfoo.a(bar.o)"). Cleaned up necessary logging code to use it.
llvm-svn: 180717
There is a new static ObjectFile function you can call:
size_t
ObjectFile::GetModuleSpecifications (const FileSpec &file,
lldb::offset_t file_offset,
ModuleSpecList &specs)
This will fill in "specs" which the details of all the module specs (file + arch + UUID (if there is one) + object name (for BSD archive objects eventually) + file offset to the object in question).
This helps us when a user specifies a file that contains a single architecture, and also helps us when we are given a debug symbol file (like a dSYM file on MacOSX) that contains one or more architectures and we need to be able to match it up to an existing Module that has no debug info.
llvm-svn: 180224
differs from lldb's own shared cache, and where the inferior process shared
cache does not match up with the on-disk shared cache file.
Simplify the code where lldb gets its own shared cache uuid a little bit.
llvm-svn: 179633
Show an error message when we have a corrupt mach-o file where the LC_SEGMENT or LC_SEGMENT_64 load command have file offsets or file offsets + sizes that extend beyond the end of the file.
llvm-svn: 179605
a UUID for the shared cache libraries that can be used to confirm
that one process' shared cache is the same as another, or that a
process' in-memory shared cache is a match for a given on-disk
dyld_shared_cache binary file. Use these UUIDs to catch some
uncommon problems when the shared caches are being changed for debug
purposes.
<rdar://problem/13524467>
llvm-svn: 179583
SectionList so we don't try to do anything with this file. Currently we end up crashing
later in the debug session when we read past the end of the file -- this at least gets us
closer with something like ProcessMachCore printing "error: core file has no sections".
<rdar://problem/13468295>
llvm-svn: 179152
LLDB is crashing when logging is enabled from lldb-perf-clang. This has to do with the global destructor chain as the process and its threads are being torn down.
All logging channels now make one and only one instance that is kept in a global pointer which is never freed. This guarantees that logging can correctly continue as the process tears itself down.
llvm-svn: 178191
This returns a vector of <file address, size> entries for all of
the functions in the module that have an eh_frame FDE.
Update ObjectFileMachO to use the eh_frame FDE function addresses if
the LC_FUNCTION_STARTS section is missing, to fill in the start
addresses of any symbols that have been stripped from the binary.
Generally speaking, lldb works best if it knows the actual start
address of every function in a module - it's especially important
for unwinding, where lldb inspects the instructions in the prologue
of the function. In a stripped binary, it is deprived of this
information and it reduces the quality of our unwinds and saved
register retrieval.
Other ObjectFile users may want to use the function addresses from
DWARFCallFrameInfo to fill in any stripped symbols like ObjectFileMachO
does already.
<rdar://problem/13365659>
llvm-svn: 177624
DWARF with .o files now uses 40-60% less memory!
Big fixes include:
- Change line table internal representation to contain "file addresses". Since each line table is owned by a compile unit that is owned by a module, it makes address translation into lldb_private::Address easy to do when needed.
- Removed linked address members/methods from lldb_private::Section and lldb_private::Address
- lldb_private::LineTable can now relink itself using a FileRangeMap to make it easier to re-link line tables in the future
- Added ObjectFile::ClearSymtab() so that we can get rid of the object file symbol tables after we parse them once since they are not needed and kept memory allocated for no reason
- Moved the m_sections_ap (std::auto_ptr to section list) and m_symtab_ap (std::auto_ptr to the lldb_private::Symtab) out of each of the ObjectFile subclasses and put it into lldb_private::ObjectFile.
- Changed how the debug map is parsed and stored to be able to:
- Lazily parse the debug map for each object file
- not require the address map for a .o file until debug information is linked for a .o file
llvm-svn: 176454
lldb was mmap'ing archive files once per .o file it loads, now it correctly shares the archive between modules.
LLDB was also always mapping entire contents of universal mach-o files, now it maps just the slice that is required.
Added a new logging channel for "lldb" called "mmap" to help track future regressions.
Modified the ObjectFile and ObjectContainer plugin interfaces to take a data offset along with the file offset and size so we can implement the correct caching and efficient reading of parts of files without mmap'ing the entire file like we used to.
The current implementation still keeps entire .a files mmaped (once) and entire slices from universal files mmaped to ensure that if a client builds their binaries during a debug session we don't lose our data and get corrupt object file info and debug info.
llvm-svn: 174524
function stub routine addresses from an in-memory-only
MachO object file. This was the only remaining part of
ParseSymtab() that was assuming a file exists.
<rdar://problem/13139585>
llvm-svn: 174455
Major fixed to allow reading files that are over 4GB. The main problems were that the DataExtractor was using 32 bit offsets as a data cursor, and since we mmap all of our object files we could run into cases where if we had a very large core file that was over 4GB, we were running into the 4GB boundary.
So I defined a new "lldb::offset_t" which should be used for all file offsets.
After making this change, I enabled warnings for data loss and for enexpected implicit conversions temporarily and found a ton of things that I fixed.
Any functions that take an index internally, should use "size_t" for any indexes and also should return "size_t" for any sizes of collections.
llvm-svn: 173463
equality can be strict or loose and we want code to
explicitly choose one or the other.
Also renamed the Compare function to IsEqualTo, to
avoid confusion.
<rdar://problem/12856749>
llvm-svn: 170152
When using the same-device optimization for shared cache libraries, if
we have an invalid load address for __LINKEDIT, don't try to read
anything out of lldb's own address space. Reading it out of the remote
address space will fail gracefully if we have bad addresses but reading
it out of lldb's own address space will result in a crash.
llvm-svn: 169582
Allow the expression parser to see more than just data symbols. We now accept any symbol that has an address. We take precautions to only accept symbols by their mangled or demangled names only if the demangled name was not synthesized. If the demangled name is synthesized, then we now mark symbols accordingly and only compare against the mangled original name.
llvm-svn: 168668
RegisterContextKDP_i386 was not correctly writing registers due to missing "virtual" keywords. Added the virtual keywords and made the functions pure virtual to ensure subclasses can't get away without implementing these functions.
llvm-svn: 167066