To make this work this patch extends LLDB to:
- Explicitly track the link_map address for each module. This is effectively the module handle, not sure why it wasn't already being stored off anywhere. As an extension later, it would be nice if someone were to add support for printing this as part of the modules list.
- Allow reading the per-thread data pointer via ptrace. I have added support for Linux here. I'll be happy to add support for FreeBSD once this is reviewed. OS X does not appear to have __thread variables, so maybe we don't need it there. Windows support should eventually be workable along the same lines.
- Make DWARF expressions track which module they originated from.
- Add support for the DW_OP_GNU_push_tls_address DWARF opcode, as generated by gcc and recent versions of clang. Earlier versions of clang (such as 3.2, which is default on Ubuntu right now) do not generate TLS debug info correctly so can not be supported here.
- Understand the format of the pthread DTV block. This is where it gets tricky. We have three basic options here:
1) Call "dlinfo" or "__tls_get_addr" on the inferior and ask it directly. However this won't work on core dumps, and generally speaking it's not a good idea for the debugger to call functions itself, as it has the potential to not work depending on the state of the target.
2) Use libthread_db. This is what GDB does. However this option requires having a version of libthread_db on the host cross-compiled for each potential target. This places a large burden on the user, and would make it very hard to cross-debug from Windows to Linux, for example. Trying to build a library intended exclusively for one OS on a different one is not pleasant. GDB sidesteps the problem and asks the user to figure it out.
3) Parse the DTV structure ourselves. On initial inspection this seems to be a bad option, as the DTV structure (the format used by the runtime to manage TLS data) is not in fact a kernel data structure, it is implemented entirely in useerland in libc. Therefore the layout of it's fields are version and OS dependent, and are not standardized.
However, it turns out not to be such a problem. All OSes use basically the same algorithm (a per-module lookup table) as detailed in Ulrich Drepper's TLS ELF ABI document, so we can easily write code to decode it ourselves. The only question therefore is the exact field layouts required. Happily, the implementors of libpthread expose the structure of the DTV via metadata exported as symbols from the .so itself, designed exactly for this kind of thing. So this patch simply reads that metadata in, and re-implements libthread_db's algorithm itself. We thereby get cross-platform TLS lookup without either requiring third-party libraries, while still being independent of the version of libpthread being used.
Test case included.
llvm-svn: 192922
that all clients use them explicitly. This will hopefully
prevent any future confusion where things get cast to types
we don't expect.
<rdar://problem/15146458>
llvm-svn: 191984
to be explicit, to prevent horrid things like
std::string a = ConstString("foo")
from taking the path ConstString -> bool -> char
-> std::string.
This fixes, among other things, ClangFunction.
<rdar://problem/15137989>
llvm-svn: 191934
Fixed an issue with the lldb/test/lang/cpp/virtual test case had a virtual class that had a DW_TAG_inheritance child that was virtual and had a DW_AT_data_member_location of:
DW_AT_data_member_location( DW_OP_dup, DW_OP_deref, DW_OP_constu(0x00000018), DW_OP_minus, DW_OP_deref, DW_OP_plus )
We failed to evaluate this and then we were passing the incorrect offset back to clang and clang would crash. The AST external source has a function named LayoutRecordType which allows us to supply the virtual base class offsets, but that really doesn't make sense to do as clang will lay them out correctly. So we must ignore virtual base classes when doing layout.
llvm-svn: 190811
to handle the case of an integer constant (DWARF 3 and later).
- Fixes tests that assert in RecordLayoutBuilder::updateExternalFieldOffset
because LLDB was providing an external AST source with missing member offsets.
llvm-svn: 187423
A long time ago we start with clang types that were created by the symbol files and there were many functions in lldb_private::ClangASTContext that helped. Later we create ClangASTType which contains a clang::ASTContext and an opauque QualType, but we didn't switch over to fully using it. There were a lot of places where we would pass around a raw clang_type_t and also pass along a clang::ASTContext separately. This left room for error.
This checkin change all type code over to use ClangASTType everywhere and I cleaned up the interfaces quite a bit. Any code that was in ClangASTContext that was type related, was moved over into ClangASTType. All code that used these types was switched over to use all of the new goodness.
llvm-svn: 186130
- 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
//------------------------------------------------------------------
/// Get all types matching \a type_mask from debug info in this
/// module.
///
/// @param[in] type_mask
/// A bitfield that consists of one or more bits logically OR'ed
/// together from the lldb::TypeClass enumeration. This allows
/// you to request only structure types, or only class, struct
/// and union types. Passing in lldb::eTypeClassAny will return
/// all types found in the debug information for this module.
///
/// @return
/// A list of types in this module that match \a type_mask
//------------------------------------------------------------------
lldb::SBTypeList
SBModule::GetTypes (uint32_t type_mask)
//------------------------------------------------------------------
/// Get all types matching \a type_mask from debug info in this
/// compile unit.
///
/// @param[in] type_mask
/// A bitfield that consists of one or more bits logically OR'ed
/// together from the lldb::TypeClass enumeration. This allows
/// you to request only structure types, or only class, struct
/// and union types. Passing in lldb::eTypeClassAny will return
/// all types found in the debug information for this compile
/// unit.
///
/// @return
/// A list of types in this compile unit that match \a type_mask
//------------------------------------------------------------------
lldb::SBTypeList
SBCompileUnit::GetTypes (uint32_t type_mask = lldb::eTypeClassAny);
This lets you request types by filling out a mask that contains one or more bits from the lldb::TypeClass enumerations, so you can only get the types you really want.
llvm-svn: 184251
Show variables that were in the debug info but optimized out. Also display a good error message when one of these variables get used in an expression.
llvm-svn: 182066
<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
Fixed LLDB to be able to correctly parse template parameters that have no name and no type. This can be triggered by the following LLVM/Clang code:
template <typename T, typename = void>
class SmallVectorTemplateCommon : public SmallVectorBase {
The “typename = void” was emitting DWARF with an empty DW_AT_name and no DW_AT_type. We now correctly infer that no DW_AT_type means “void” and that an empty name is ok.
This means you can now call functions on things that inherit from SmallVectorTemplateCommon.
llvm-svn: 180155
if we didn't want to put in a CXXConstructorDecl. This
prevents malformed classes (i.e., classes with regular C
functions as members) from being generated from type
information (and fixes a crash in the test suite).
<rdar://problem/13550765>
llvm-svn: 179136
Now we can:
1 - see the return value for functions that return types that use the "ext_vector_size"
2 - dump values that use the vector attributes ("expr $ymm0")
3 - modified the DWARF parser to correctly parse GNU vector types from the DWARF by turning them into clang::Type::ExtVector types instead of just standard arrays
llvm-svn: 178924
Symbol table function names should support lookups like symbols with debug info.
To fix this I:
- Gutted the way FindFunctions is used, there used to be way too much smarts only in the DWARF plug-in
- Made it more efficient by chopping the name up once and using simpler queries so that SymbolFile and Symtab plug-ins don't need to do as much
- Filter the results at a higher level
- Make the lldb_private::Symtab able to chop up C++ mangled names and make as much sense out of them as possible and also be able to search by basename, fullname, method name, and selector name.
llvm-svn: 178608
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
Make dynamic type detection faster by using the AST metadata to help out and allow us not to complete types when we don't need to.
After running "purge" on a MacOSX system, the Xcode variables view now populates more than 3x faster with this fix.
llvm-svn: 176676
Also added C++11 enum test cases to cover enums as int8_t, int16_t int32_t, int64_t, uint8_t, uint16_t, uint32_t, and uint64_t both for DWARF and dSYM cases. The DWARF being emitted by clang is missing the enum integer type, but the code is now ready to accept and deal with the integral type if it is supplied.
llvm-svn: 176548
LLDB wasn't printing the names for negative enums. Fixed the signed extraction of enumerators and how they were registered with clang's type system.
llvm-svn: 176533
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
Fixed an issue with clang 500's new way to represent static class variables where it emits a DW_TAG_member with a DW_AT_external(0x01) attribute and no DW_AT_data_member_location.
llvm-svn: 176140
SymbolFileDWARF code:
- If a class is being uniqued to another copy of itself
and the method lists don't match exactly, take a slow
path and at least unique the methods that they have
in common.
- Sort name_to_die maps before querying them. This
would otherwise result in uniquing failures because
looking up a name in a map that contains it would
often fail.
- Tolerate classes in other symbol files in the case
of debugging with .o files rather than with a
.dSYM. We used to assume that the classes being
uniqued were in the same symbol file, causing
unpredictable results.
This will dramatically reduce the number of cases where
a function does not have a valid DeclContext.
<rdar://problem/12153915>
llvm-svn: 176067
StackFrame assumes m_sc is additive, but m_sc can lose its target. So now the SymbolContext::Clear() method takes a bool that indicates if the target should be cleared. Modified all existing code to properly set the bool argument.
llvm-svn: 175953
if it encountered bad debug information. This
debug information had an Objective-C method whose
selector disagreed with the true number of arguments
to that method.
<rdar://problem/12992864>
llvm-svn: 174557
Cleaned up the objective C name parsing code to use a class.
Now breakpoints that are set by name that are objective C methods without the leading '+' or '-' will resolve. We do this by expanding all the objective C names for a given string. For example:
(lldb) b [MyString cStringUsingEncoding:]
Will set a breakpoint with multiple possible names:
-[MyString cStringUsingEncoding:]
+[MyString cStringUsingEncoding:]
Also if you have a category, it will strip the category and set a breakpoint in all variants:
(lldb) [MyString(my_category) cStringUsingEncoding:]
Will resolve to the following names:
-[MyString(my_category) cStringUsingEncoding:]
+[MyString(my_category) cStringUsingEncoding:]
-[MyString cStringUsingEncoding:]
+[MyString cStringUsingEncoding:]
Likewise when we have:
(lldb) b -[MyString(my_category) cStringUsingEncoding:]
It will resolve to two names:
-[MyString(my_category) cStringUsingEncoding:]
-[MyString cStringUsingEncoding:]
llvm-svn: 173858
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
to report a structure with an array of size 1
at the end without accounting for that array
when reporting the struct's total size to Clang.
LLDB now coerces such an array to size 0.
<rdar://problem/12822204>
llvm-svn: 170168
Fixed zero sized arrays to work correctly. This will only happen once we get a clang that emits correct debug info for zero sized arrays. For now I have marked the TestStructTypes.py as an expected failure.
llvm-svn: 169465
- Removed the BitfieldMap class because it is unnecessary.
We now just track the most recently added field.
- Moved the code that calculates bitfield widths so it
can also be used to determine whether it's necessary
to insert anonymous fields.
- Simplified the anonymous field calculation code into
three cases (two of which are resolved identically).
- Beefed up the bitfield testcase.
llvm-svn: 169449
Fixed an issue where lldb was setting breakpoints on too many methods when a partial function name with namespaces or class qualifiers was used. For example setting a breakpoint of "Foo::dealloc" was accidentally settings breakpoints on all objective C functions whose selector was "dealloc"...
llvm-svn: 168053
When uniquing classes against one another we can't depend on any or all of the artificial functions (default ctor, dtor, copy ctor, move ctor, etc) being in each definition. Now we treat those separately and handle those to the best of our ability.
llvm-svn: 167752
<rdar://problem/12153915> (partial fix)
Remove an assert and place an error message instead so we don't crash when we run into a type tag that we don't recognize. We will now emit a warning so that hopefully we can get a bug report that has example code that shows what we are missing.
Also fixed a case when trying to unique one type to another where we would confuse concrete instances of methods with their definitions and end up not correctly registering the types.
llvm-svn: 167557
Unnamed bitfields cause struct layout problems
Synthesize unnamed bitfields when required. Most compilers don't mention unnamed bitfields in the DWARF, so we need to create them to keep clang happy with the types we create from the DWARF. We currently can't do this for ObjC since the DW_AT_bit_offset value for any direct ivars of ObjC classes as the values for these attributes are bogus. A bug has been filed on Clang to fix this, and another bug has been filed on LLDB to make sure we fix the DWARF parser once the clang fix is in by looking the the DW_AT_producer in the compile unit attributes and finding the compiler version and only enabling it for newer versions of clang.
llvm-svn: 167424
LLDB now provides base class offsets (virtual and non virtual) to Clang's record layout. We previously were told this wasn't necessary, but it is when pragma pack gets involved.
llvm-svn: 167262
so it could hold this information, and then used it to look up unfound names in the object pointer
if it exists. This gets "frame var" to work for unqualified references to ivars captured in blocks.
But the expression parser is ignoring this information still.
llvm-svn: 166860
1 by the expression parser. We now correctly
report that they are of size 0. (C++ structs
are mandated to have nonzero size, and Clang marks
them as being 1 byte in size.)
<rdar://problem/12380800>
llvm-svn: 166256
top-of-tree. Removed all local patches and llvm.zip.
The intent is that fron now on top-of-tree will
always build against LLVM/Clang top-of-tree, and
that problems building will be resolved as they
occur. Stable release branches of LLDB can be
constructed as needed and linked to specific release
branches of LLVM/Clang.
llvm-svn: 164563
Make breakpoint setting by file and line much more efficient by only looking for inlined breakpoint locations if we are setting a breakpoint in anything but a source implementation file. Implementing this complex for a many reasons. Turns out that parsing compile units lazily had some issues with respect to how we need to do things with DWARF in .o files. So the fixes in the checkin for this makes these changes:
- Add a new setting called "target.inline-breakpoint-strategy" which can be set to "never", "always", or "headers". "never" will never try and set any inlined breakpoints (fastest). "always" always looks for inlined breakpoint locations (slowest, but most accurate). "headers", which is the default setting, will only look for inlined breakpoint locations if the breakpoint is set in what are consudered to be header files, which is realy defined as "not in an implementation source file".
- modify the breakpoint setting by file and line to check the current "target.inline-breakpoint-strategy" setting and act accordingly
- Modify compile units to be able to get their language and other info lazily. This allows us to create compile units from the debug map and not have to fill all of the details in, and then lazily discover this information as we go on debuggging. This is needed to avoid parsing all .o files when setting breakpoints in implementation only files (no inlines). Otherwise we would need to parse the .o file, the object file (mach-o in our case) and the symbol file (DWARF in the object file) just to see what the compile unit was.
- modify the "SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap" to subclass lldb_private::Module so that the virtual "GetObjectFile()" and "GetSymbolVendor()" functions can be intercepted when the .o file contenst are later lazilly needed. Prior to this fix, when we first instantiated the "SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap" class, we would also make modules, object files and symbol files for every .o file in the debug map because we needed to fix up the sections in the .o files with information that is in the executable debug map. Now we lazily do this in the DebugMapModule::GetObjectFile()
Cleaned up header includes a bit as well.
llvm-svn: 162860
Fixed an issue that could cause references the shared data for an object file to stay around longer than intended and could cause memory bloat when debugging multiple times.
llvm-svn: 161716
that automatically generated setters/getters only
get added to a class after explicitly declared (or
synthesized) getters/setters had the chance to be
added. This eliminates conflicts creating errors
of the form:
error: instance method '...' has incompatible result
types in different translation units ('X *' vs. 'id')
llvm-svn: 157956
Fixed an issue with the current type being set to DIE_IS_BEING_PARSED in the m_die_to_type map by making sure the type pointer is valid.
llvm-svn: 157836
(actually, mainly just hooked up support that was already
there). Added a test case, although it's expected to fail
right now unless you're using top-of-tree LLVM.
llvm-svn: 157220
ObjCPlusPlus as Objective-C classes. Really the
compiler should say they have Objective-C runtime
class, but we should be a little more resilient
(we were refusing to find ivars in those classes
before).
Also added a test case.
llvm-svn: 155515
Fixed an issue that would happen when using debug map with DWARF in the .o files where we wouldn't ever track down the actual definition for a type when things were in namespaces. We now serialize the decl context information into an intermediate format which allows us to track down the correct definition for a type regardless of which DWARF symbol file it comes from. We do this by creating a "DWARFDeclContext" object that contains the DW_TAG + name for each item in a decl context which we can then use to veto potential accelerator table matches. For example, the accelerator tables store the basename of the type, so if you have "std::vector<int>", we would end up with an accelerator table entry for the type that contained "vector<int>", which we would then search for using a DWARFDeclContext object that contained:
[0] DW_TAG_class_type "vector<int>"
[1] DW_TAG_namespace "std"
This is currently used to track down forward declarations for things like "class a:🅱️:Foo;".
llvm-svn: 155488
class AnalysisResolver;
And we will look for it everywhere and find many many matches, but the decl context of those matching DIEs is "clang::AnalysisResolver", so we never match anything, yet we pull in waaayyy too much DWARF in the process.
To enable this logging enable the "lookups" category in the "dwarf" log channel:
(lldb) log enable dwarf lookups
llvm-svn: 155233
the debug information individual Decls came from.
We've had a metadata infrastructure for a while,
which was intended to solve a problem we've since
dealt with in a different way. (It was meant to
keep track of which definition of an Objective-C
class was the "true" definition, but we now find
it by searching the symbols for the class symbol.)
The metadata is attached to the ExternalASTSource,
which means it has a one-to-one correspondence with
AST contexts.
I've repurposed the metadata infrastructure to
hold the object file and DIE offset for the DWARF
information corresponding to a Decl. There are
methods in ClangASTContext that get and set this
metadata, and the ClangASTImporter is capable of
tracking down the metadata for Decls that have been
copied out of the debug information into the
parser's AST context without using any additional
memory.
To see the metadata, you just have to enable the
expression log:
-
(lldb) log enable lldb expr
-
and watch the import messages. The high 32 bits
of the metadata indicate the index of the object
file in its containing DWARFDebugMap; I have also
added a log which you can use to track that mapping:
-
(lldb) log enable dwarf map
-
This adds 64 bits per Decl, which in my testing
hasn't turned out to be very much (debugging Clang
produces around 6500 Decls in my tests). To track
how much data is being consumed, I've also added a
global variable g_TotalSizeOfMetadata which tracks
the total number of Decls that have metadata in all
active AST contexts.
Right now this metadata is enormously useful for
tracking down bugs in the debug info parser. In the
future I also want to use this information to provide
more intelligent error messages instead of printing
empty source lines wherever Clang refers to the
location where something is defined.
llvm-svn: 154634
FunctionDecls into classes if it looked up a
method in a different DWARF context than the
one where it found the parent class's definition.
The symptom of this was, for a method A::B(),
1) LLDB finds A in context 1, creating a
CXXRecordDecl for A and marking it as needing
completion
2) LLDB looks up B in context 2, finds that its
parent A already has a CXXRecordDecl, but can't
find a CXXMethodDecl for B
3) Not finding a CXXMethodDecl for B, LLDB doesn't
set the flag indicating that B was resolved
4) Because the flag wasn't set, LLDB's fallthrough
code creates a FunctionDecl for B and sticks it
in the DeclContext -- in this case, A.
5) Clang crashes on finding a FunctionDecl inside a
CXXRecordDecl.
llvm-svn: 154627
correctly if the setter/getter were not present
in the debug information. The fixes are as follows:
- We not only look for the method by its full name,
but also look for automatically-generated methods
when searching for a selector in an Objective-C
interface. This is necessary to find accessors.
- Extract the getter and setter name from the
DW_TAG_APPLE_Property declaration in the DWARF
if they are present; generate them if not.
llvm-svn: 154067
Fixed an issue where there were more than one way to get a CompileUnitSP created when using SymbolFileDWARF with SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap. This led to an assertion that would fire under certain conditions. Now there is only one way to create the compile unit and it will "do the right thing".
llvm-svn: 153908
(lldb) log enable --verbose lldb completion
This will print out backtraces for all type completion calls which will help us verify that we don't ever complete a type when we don't need to.
llvm-svn: 153787
Fixed an issue that could cause circular type parsing that will assert and kill LLDB.
Prior to this fix the DWARF parser would always create class types and not start their definitions (for both C++ and ObjC classes) until we were asked to complete the class later. When we had cases like:
class A
{
class B
{
};
};
We would alway try to complete A before specifying "A" as the decl context for B. Turns out we can just start the definition and still not complete the class since we can check the TagDecl::isCompleteDefinition() function. This only works for C++ types. This means we will not be pulling in the full definition of parent classes all the time and should help with our memory consumption and also reduce the amount of debug info we have to parse.
I also reduced redundant code that was checking in a lldb::clang_type_t was a possible C++ dynamic type since it was still completing the type, just to see if it was dynamic. This was fixed in another function that was checking for a type being dynamic as an ObjC or a C++ type, but there was dedicated fucntion for C++ that we missed.
llvm-svn: 153713
Symbol files (dSYM files on darwin) can now be specified during program execution:
(lldb) target symbols add /path/to/symfile/a.out.dSYM/Contents/Resources/DWARF/a.out
This command can be used when you have a debug session in progress and want to add symbols to get better debug info fidelity.
llvm-svn: 153693
for unbacked properties. We support two variants:
one in which the getter/setter are provided by
selector ("mySetter:") and one in which the
getter/setter are provided by signature
("-[MyClass mySetter:]").
llvm-svn: 153675
1 - sections only get a valid VM size if they have SHF_ALLOC in the section flags
2 - symbol names are marked as mangled if they start with "_Z"
Also fixed the DWARF parser to correctly use the section file size when extracting the DWARF.
llvm-svn: 153496
Fixed type lookups to "do the right thing". Prior to this fix, looking up a type using "foo::bar" would result in a type list that contains all types that had "bar" as a basename unless the symbol file was able to match fully qualified names (which our DWARF parser does not).
This fix will allow type matches to be made based on the basename and then have the types that don't match filtered out. Types by name can be fully qualified, or partially qualified with the new "bool exact_match" parameter to the Module::FindTypes() method.
This fixes some issue that we discovered with dynamic type resolution as well as improves the overall type lookups in LLDB.
llvm-svn: 153482
Fixed a case where the source path remappings on the module were too expensive to
use when we try to verify (stat the file system) that the remapped path points to
a valid file. Now we will use the lldb_private::Module path remappings (if any) when
parsing the debug info without verifying that the paths exist so we don't slow down
line table parsing speeds.
llvm-svn: 153059
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=12232
Fixed a case where a missing "break" in a switch statement could cause an assertion to fire and kill the debug session.
The fix was derived from the findings of Andrea Bigagli, thanks Andrea.
llvm-svn: 152741
This fix really needed to happen as a previous fix I had submitted for
calculating symbol sizes made many symbols appear to have zero size since
the function that was calculating the symbol size was calling another function
that would cause the calculation to happen again. This resulted in some symbols
having zero size when they shouldn't. This could then cause infinite stack
traces and many other side affects.
llvm-svn: 152244
so that the expression parser can look up members
of anonymous structs correctly. This meant creating
all the proper IndirectFieldDecls in each Record
after it has been completely populated with members.
llvm-svn: 151868
I started work on being able to add symbol files after a debug session
had started with a new "target symfile add" command and quickly ran into
problems with stale Address objects in breakpoint locations that had
lldb_private::Section pointers into modules that had been removed or
replaced. This also let to grabbing stale modules from those sections.
So I needed to thread harded the Address, Section and related objects.
To do this I modified the ModuleChild class to now require a ModuleSP
on initialization so that a weak reference can created. I also changed
all places that were handing out "Section *" to have them hand out SectionSP.
All ObjectFile, SymbolFile and SymbolVendors were inheriting from ModuleChild
so all of the find plug-in, static creation function and constructors now
require ModuleSP references instead of Module *.
Address objects now have weak references to their sections which can
safely go stale when a module gets destructed.
This checkin doesn't complete the "target symfile add" command, but it
does get us a lot clioser to being able to do such things without a high
risk of crashing or memory corruption.
llvm-svn: 151336
Objective-C classes. This allows LLDB to find
ivars declared in class extensions in modules other
than where the debugger is currently stopped (we
already supported this when the debugger was
stopped in the same module as the definition).
This involved the following main changes:
- The ObjCLanguageRuntime now knows how to hunt
for the authoritative version of an Objective-C
type. It looks for the symbol indicating a
definition, and then gets the type from the
module containing that symbol.
- ValueObjects now report their type with a
potential override, and the override is set if
the type of the ValueObject is an Objective-C
class or pointer type that is defined somewhere
other than the original reported type. This
means that "frame variable" will always use the
complete type if one is available.
- The ClangASTSource now looks for the complete
type when looking for ivars. This means that
"expr" will always use the complete type if one
is available.
- I added a testcase that verifies that both
"frame variable" and "expr" work.
llvm-svn: 151214
indicate whether inline functions are desired.
This allows the expression parser, for instance,
to filter out inlined functions when looking for
functions it can call.
llvm-svn: 150279
enable us to track the depth of parsing and what is being parsed. This
helps when trying to track down difficult type parsing issues and is only
enabled in non-production builds.
llvm-svn: 150203
working, but not functions). I need to check on a few things to make sure
I am registering everything correctly in the right order and in the right
contexts.
llvm-svn: 149858
interface (.i) files for each class.
Changed the FindFunction class from:
uint32_t
SBTarget::FindFunctions (const char *name,
uint32_t name_type_mask,
bool append,
lldb::SBSymbolContextList& sc_list)
uint32_t
SBModule::FindFunctions (const char *name,
uint32_t name_type_mask,
bool append,
lldb::SBSymbolContextList& sc_list)
To:
lldb::SBSymbolContextList
SBTarget::FindFunctions (const char *name,
uint32_t name_type_mask = lldb::eFunctionNameTypeAny);
lldb::SBSymbolContextList
SBModule::FindFunctions (const char *name,
uint32_t name_type_mask = lldb::eFunctionNameTypeAny);
This makes the API easier to use from python. Also added the ability to
append a SBSymbolContext or a SBSymbolContextList to a SBSymbolContextList.
Exposed properties for lldb.SBSymbolContextList in python:
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.modules => list() or all lldb.SBModule objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.compile_units => list() or all lldb.SBCompileUnits objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.functions => list() or all lldb.SBFunction objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.blocks => list() or all lldb.SBBlock objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.line_entries => list() or all lldb.SBLineEntry objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.symbols => list() or all lldb.SBSymbol objects in the list
This allows a call to the SBTarget::FindFunctions(...) and SBModule::FindFunctions(...)
and then the result can be used to extract the desired information:
sc_list = lldb.target.FindFunctions("erase")
for function in sc_list.functions:
print function
for symbol in sc_list.symbols:
print symbol
Exposed properties for the lldb.SBSymbolContext objects in python:
lldb.SBSymbolContext.module => lldb.SBModule
lldb.SBSymbolContext.compile_unit => lldb.SBCompileUnit
lldb.SBSymbolContext.function => lldb.SBFunction
lldb.SBSymbolContext.block => lldb.SBBlock
lldb.SBSymbolContext.line_entry => lldb.SBLineEntry
lldb.SBSymbolContext.symbol => lldb.SBSymbol
Exposed properties for the lldb.SBBlock objects in python:
lldb.SBBlock.parent => lldb.SBBlock for the parent block that contains
lldb.SBBlock.sibling => lldb.SBBlock for the sibling block to the current block
lldb.SBBlock.first_child => lldb.SBBlock for the first child block to the current block
lldb.SBBlock.call_site => for inline functions, return a lldb.declaration object that gives the call site file, line and column
lldb.SBBlock.name => for inline functions this is the name of the inline function that this block represents
lldb.SBBlock.inlined_block => returns the inlined function block that contains this block (might return itself if the current block is an inlined block)
lldb.SBBlock.range[int] => access the address ranges for a block by index, a list() with start and end address is returned
lldb.SBBlock.ranges => an array or all address ranges for this block
lldb.SBBlock.num_ranges => the number of address ranges for this blcok
SBFunction objects can now get the SBType and the SBBlock that represents the
top scope of the function.
SBBlock objects can now get the variable list from the current block. The value
list returned allows varaibles to be viewed prior with no process if code
wants to check the variables in a function. There are two ways to get a variable
list from a SBBlock:
lldb::SBValueList
SBBlock::GetVariables (lldb::SBFrame& frame,
bool arguments,
bool locals,
bool statics,
lldb::DynamicValueType use_dynamic);
lldb::SBValueList
SBBlock::GetVariables (lldb::SBTarget& target,
bool arguments,
bool locals,
bool statics);
When a SBFrame is used, the values returned will be locked down to the frame
and the values will be evaluated in the context of that frame.
When a SBTarget is used, global an static variables can be viewed without a
running process.
llvm-svn: 149853
Fixed "target modules list" (aliased to "image list") to output more information
by default. Modified the "target modules list" to have a few new options:
"--header" or "-h" => show the image header address
"--offset" or "-o" => show the image header address offset from the address in the file (the slide applied to the shared library)
Removed the "--symfile-basename" or "-S" option, and repurposed it to
"--symfile-unique" "-S" which will show the symbol file if it differs from
the executable file.
ObjectFile's can now be loaded from memory for cases where we don't have the
files cached locally in an SDK or net mounted root. ObjectFileMachO can now
read mach files from memory.
Moved the section data reading code into the ObjectFile so that the object
file can get the section data from Process memory if the file is only in
memory.
lldb_private::Module can now load its object file in a target with a rigid
slide (very common operation for most dynamic linkers) by using:
bool
Module::SetLoadAddress (Target &target, lldb::addr_t offset, bool &changed)
lldb::SBModule() now has a new constructor in the public interface:
SBModule::SBModule (lldb::SBProcess &process, lldb::addr_t header_addr);
This will find an appropriate ObjectFile plug-in to load an image from memory
where the object file header is at "header_addr".
llvm-svn: 149804
LLVM/Clang. This brings in several fixes, including:
- Improvements in the Just-In-Time compiler's
allocation of memory: the JIT now allocates
memory in chunks of sections, improving its
ability to generate relocations. I have
revamped the RecordingMemoryManager to reflect
these changes, as well as to get the memory
allocation and data copying out fo the
ClangExpressionParser code. Jim Grosbach wrote
the updates to the JIT on the LLVM side.
- A new ExternalASTSource interface to allow LLDB to
report accurate structure layout information to
Clang. Previously we could only report the sizes
of fields, not their offsets. This meant that if
data structures included field alignment
directives, we could not communicate the necessary
alignment to Clang and accesses to the data would
fail. Now we can (and I have update the relevant
test case). Thanks to Doug Gregor for implementing
the Clang side of this fix.
- The way Objective-C interfaces are completed by
Clang has been made consistent with RecordDecls;
with help from Doug Gregor and Greg Clayton I have
ensured that this still works.
- I have eliminated all local LLVM and Clang patches,
committing the ones that are still relevant to LLVM
and Clang as needed.
I have tested the changes extensively locally, but
please let me know if they cause any trouble for you.
llvm-svn: 149775
a type when we have a forward declaration. We always have found a
type by basename, but now we also compare the decl context of the
die we are trying to complete with the matches we find from the accelerator
tables to ensure we get the right one.
llvm-svn: 149593
due to RTTI worries since llvm and clang don't use RTTI, but I was able to
switch back with no issues as far as I can tell. Once the RTTI issue wasn't
an issue, we were looking for a way to properly track weak pointers to objects
to solve some of the threading issues we have been running into which naturally
led us back to std::tr1::weak_ptr. We also wanted the ability to make a shared
pointer from just a pointer, which is also easily solved using the
std::tr1::enable_shared_from_this class.
The main reason for this move back is so we can start properly having weak
references to objects. Currently a lldb_private::Thread class has a refrence
to its parent lldb_private::Process. This doesn't work well when we now hand
out a SBThread object that contains a shared pointer to a lldb_private::Thread
as this SBThread can be held onto by external clients and if they end up
using one of these objects we can easily crash.
So the next task is to start adopting std::tr1::weak_ptr where ever it makes
sense which we can do with lldb_private::Debugger, lldb_private::Target,
lldb_private::Process, lldb_private::Thread, lldb_private::StackFrame, and
many more objects now that they are no longer using intrusive ref counted
pointer objects (you can't do std::tr1::weak_ptr functionality with intrusive
pointers).
llvm-svn: 149207
will ask ExternalASTSource objects to help laying out a type. This is needed
because the DWARF typically doesn't contain alignement or packing attribute
values, and we need to be able to match up types that the compiler uses
in expressions.
llvm-svn: 149160
be fetched too many times and the DisassemblerLLVM was appending to strings
when the opcode, mnemonic and comment accessors were called multiple times
and if any of the strings were empty.
Also fixed the test suite failures from recent Objective C modifications.
llvm-svn: 148460
for each ObjCInterfaceDecl was imposing performance
penalties for Objective-C apps. Instead, we now use
the normal function query mechanisms, which use the
relevant accelerator tables.
This fix also includes some modifications to the
SymbolFile which allow us to find Objective-C methods
and report their Clang Decls correctly.
llvm-svn: 148457
objective C class names when extracting the class name, selector and
name without category for objective C full class and instance method
names.
llvm-svn: 148435
much smarter by extracting search results more efficiently and by properly obeying the
must_be_implementation bool in the SymbolFileDWARF::FindCompleteObjCDefinitionTypeForDIE()
function.
llvm-svn: 148413
Fix DWARF parsing issue we can run into when using llvm-gcc based dSYM files.
Also fix the parsing of objective C built-in types (Class, id and SEL) so
they don't parse more information that is not needed due to the way they
are represented in DWARF.
llvm-svn: 148016
so that we don't have "fprintf (stderr, ...)" calls sprinkled everywhere.
Changed all needed locations over to using this.
For non-darwin, we log to stderr only. On darwin, we log to stderr _and_
to ASL (Apple System Log facility). This will allow GUI apps to have a place
for these error and warning messages to go, and also allows the command line
apps to log directly to the terminal.
llvm-svn: 147596
Be better at detecting when DWARF changes and handle this more
gracefully than asserting and exiting.
Also fixed up a bunch of system calls that weren't properly checking
for EINTR.
llvm-svn: 147559
<rdar://problem/10561406>
Stopped the SymbolFileDWARF::FindFunctions (...) from always calculating
the line table entry for all functions that were found. This can slow down
the expression parser if it ends up finding a bunch of matches. Fixed the
places that were relying on the line table entry being filled in.
Discovered a recursive stack blowout that happened when "main" didn't have
line info for it and there was no line information for "main"
llvm-svn: 146330
An assertion was firing when parsing types due to trying to complete parent
class decl contenxt types too often.
Also, relax where "dsymutil" binary can come from in the Makefile.rules.
llvm-svn: 146310
that if we prefer the current compile unit, followed by any compile units that
already had their DIEs parsed, followed by the rest of the matches, that we
might save some memory. This turned out not to help much. The code is commented
out, but I want to check it in so I don't lose the code in case it could help
later.
Added the ability to efficiently find the objective C class implementation
when using the new .apple_types acclerator tables with the type flags. If the
type flags are not available, we default back to what we were doing before.
llvm-svn: 146250
in the context in which it was originally found, the
expression parser now goes hunting for it in all modules
(in the appropriate namespace, if applicable). This means
that forward-declared types that exist in another shared
library will now be resolved correctly.
Added a test case to cover this. The test case also tests
"frame variable," which does not have this functionality
yet.
llvm-svn: 146204
that is in a class from the expression parser, and it was causing an
assertion. There is now a function that will correctly resolve a type
even if it is in a class.
llvm-svn: 146141
take a SymbolFile reference and a lldb::user_id_t and be used in objects
which represent things in debug symbols that have types where we don't need
to know the true type yet, such as in lldb_private::Variable objects. This
allows us to defer resolving the type until something is used. More specifically
this allows us to get 1000 local variables from the current function, and if
the user types "frame variable argc", we end up _only_ resolving the type for
"argc" and not for the 999 other local variables. We can expand the use of this
as needed in the future.
Modified the DWARFMappedHash class to be able to read the HashData that has
more than just the DIE offset. It currently will read the atoms in the header
definition and read the data correctly. Currently only the DIE offset and
type flags are supported. This is needed for adding type flags to the
.apple_types hash accelerator tables.
Fixed a assertion crash that would happen if we have a variable that had a
DW_AT_const_value instead of a location where "location.LocationContains_DW_OP_addr()"
would end up asserting when it tried to parse the variable location as a
DWARF opcode list.
Decreased the amount of memory that LLDB would use when evaluating an expression
by 3x - 4x for clang. There was a place in the namespace lookup code that was
parsing all namespaces with a certain name in a DWARF file instead of stopping
when it found the first match. This was causing all of the compile units with
a matching namespace to get parsed into memory and causing unnecessary memory
bloat.
Improved "Target::EvaluateExpression(...)" to not try and find a variable
when the expression contains characters that would certainly cause an expression
to need to be evaluated by the debugger.
llvm-svn: 146130
class. The thing with Objective C classes is the debug info might have a
definition that isn't just a forward decl, but it is incomplete. So we need to
look and see if we can find the complete definition and avoid recursing a lot
due to the fact that our accelerator tables will have many versions of the
type, but only one complete one. We might not also have the complete type
and we need to deal with this correctly.
llvm-svn: 145759
Objective-C, making symbol lookups for various raw
Objective-C symbols work correctly. The IR interpreter
makes these lookups because Clang has emitted raw
symbol references for ivars and classes.
Also improved performance in SymbolFiles, caching the
result of asking for SymbolFile abilities.
llvm-svn: 145758
Fixed an issue where if we have the DWARF equivalent of:
struct foo;
class foo { ... };
Or vice versa, we wouldn't be able to find the complete type. Since many
compilers allow forward declarations to have struct and definitions to have
class, we need to be able to deal with both cases. This commit fixes this in
the DWARF parser.
llvm-svn: 145733
to launch a process for debugging. Since this isn't supported on all platforms,
we need to do what we used to do if this isn't supported. I added:
bool
Platform::CanDebugProcess ();
This will get checked before trying to launch a process for debugging and then
fall back to launching the process through the current host debugger. This
should solve the issue for linux and keep the platform code clean.
Centralized logging code for logging errors, warnings and logs when reporting
things for modules or symbol files. Both lldb_private::Module and
lldb_private::SymbolFile now have the following member functions:
void
LogMessage (Log *log, const char *format, ...);
void
ReportWarning (const char *format, ...);
void
ReportError (const char *format, ...);
These will all output the module name and object (if any) such as:
"error: lldb.so ...."
"warning: my_archive.a(foo.o) ...."
This will keep the output consistent and stop a lot of logging calls from
having to try and output all of the information that uniquely identifies
a module or symbol file. Many places in the code were grabbing the path to the
object file manually and if the module represented a .o file in an archive, we
would see log messages like:
error: foo.a - some error happened
llvm-svn: 145219
This is the actual fix for the above radar where global variables that weren't
initialized were not being shown correctly when leaving the DWARF in the .o
files. Global variables that aren't intialized have symbols in the .o files
that specify they are undefined and external to the .o file, yet document the
size of the variable. This allows the compiler to emit a single copy, but makes
it harder for our DWARF in .o files with the executable having a debug map
because the symbol for the global in the .o file doesn't exist in a section
that we can assign a fixed up linked address to, and also the DWARF contains
an invalid address in the "DW_OP_addr" location (always zero). This means that
the DWARF is incorrect and actually maps all such global varaibles to the
first file address in the .o file which is usually the first function. So we
can fix this in either of two ways: make a new fake section in the .o file
so that we have a file address in the .o file that we can relink, or fix the
the variable as it is created in the .o file DWARF parser and actually give it
the file address from the executable. Each variable contains a
SymbolContextScope, or a single pointer that helps us to recreate where the
variables came from (which module, file, function, etc). This context helps
us to resolve any file addresses that might be in the location description of
the variable by pointing us to which file the file address comes from, so we
can just replace the SymbolContextScope and also fix up the location, which we
would have had to do for the other case as well, and update the file address.
Now globals display correctly.
The above changes made it possible to determine if a variable is a global
or static variable when parsing DWARF. The DWARF emits a DW_TAG_variable tag
for each variable (local, global, or static), yet DWARF provides no way for
us to classify these variables into these categories. We can now detect when
a variable has a simple address expressions as its location and this will help
us classify these correctly.
While making the above changes I also noticed that we had two symbol types:
eSymbolTypeExtern and eSymbolTypeUndefined which mean essentially the same
thing: the symbol is not defined in the current object file. Symbol objects
also have a bit that specifies if a symbol is externally visible, so I got
rid of the eSymbolTypeExtern symbol type and moved all code locations that
used it to use the eSymbolTypeUndefined type.
llvm-svn: 144489
string to avoid possible later crashes.
Modified the locations that do set the crash description to NULL out the
string when they are done doing their tasks.
llvm-svn: 144297
generated special member functions (constructors,
destructors, etc.) for classes that don't really have
them. We needed to mark these as artificial to reflect
the debug information; this bug does that for
constructors and destructors.
The "etc." case (certain assignment operators, mostly)
remains to be fixed.
llvm-svn: 143526
method as __attribute__ ((used)) when adding it to a
class. This functionality is useful when stopped in
anonymous namespaces: expressions attached to classes
in anonymous namespaces are typically elided by Clang's
CodeGen because they have no namespaces are intended
not to be externally visible. __attribute__ ((used))
forces CodeGen to emit the function.
Right now, __attribute__ ((used)) causes the JIT not to
emit the function, so we're not enabling it until we
fix that.
llvm-svn: 143469
in the same hashed format as the ".apple_names", but they map objective C
class names to all of the methods and class functions. We need to do this
because in the DWARF the methods for Objective C are never contained in the
class definition, they are scattered about at the translation unit level and
they don't even have attributes that say the are contained within the class
itself.
Added 3 new formats which can be used to display data:
eFormatAddressInfo
eFormatHexFloat
eFormatInstruction
eFormatAddressInfo describes an address such as function+offset and file+line,
or symbol + offset, or constant data (c string, 2, 4, 8, or 16 byte constants).
The format character for this is "A", the long format is "address".
eFormatHexFloat will print out the hex float format that compilers tend to use.
The format character for this is "X", the long format is "hex float".
eFormatInstruction will print out disassembly with bytes and it will use the
current target's architecture. The format character for this is "i" (which
used to be being used for the integer format, but the integer format also has
"d", so we gave the "i" format to disassembly), the long format is
"instruction".
Mate the lldb::FormatterChoiceCriterion enumeration private as it should have
been from the start. It is very specialized and doesn't belong in the public
API.
llvm-svn: 143114
Fixed an issue where bad DWARF from clang would get recycled from DWARF back
into types and cause clang to assert and die, killing the lldb binary, when
it tried to used the type in an expression.
llvm-svn: 142897
tables (like the .apple_namespaces) and it would cause us to index DWARF that
didn't need to be indexed.
Updated the MappedHash.h (generic Apple accelerator table) and the DWARF
specific one (HashedNameToDIE.h) to be up to date with the latest and
greatest hash table format.
llvm-svn: 142627
process IDs, and thread IDs, but was mainly needed for for the UserID's for
Types so that DWARF with debug map can work flawlessly. With DWARF in .o files
the type ID was the DIE offset in the DWARF for the .o file which is not
unique across all .o files, so now the SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap class will
make the .o file index part (the high 32 bits) of the unique type identifier
so it can uniquely identify the types.
llvm-svn: 142534
so we don't have to lookup types in a type list by ID.
Changed the DWARF parser to remove the "can externally complete myself" bits
from the type when we are in the process of completing the type itself to
avoid an onslaught of external visible decl requests from the
clang::ExternalASTSource.
llvm-svn: 142461
which had previously been commented out while I tested
it. It's not fully working yet, but it doesn't break
our testsuite and it's an important piece of
functionality.
Also added some logging to SymbolFileDWARF to help
diagnose entities that are found in a symbol file,
but do not reside in the expected namespace.
llvm-svn: 141894
context object. Having it populated and registered
within a single FindExternalVisibleDecls call worked
fine when there was only one call (i.e., when we were
just looking in the global namespace).
However, now FindExternalVisibleDecls is called for
nested namespaces as well, which means that it is
called not once but many times (once per module in
which the parent namespace appears). This means that
the namespace mapping is built up across many calls
to the inferior FindExternalVisibleDecls, so I moved
it into a data structure (the search context) that is
shared by all calls.
I also added some logging to make it easier to see
what is happening during a namespace search, and
cleaned up some existing logging.
llvm-svn: 141888
down through Module and SymbolVendor into SymbolFile.
Added checks to SymbolFileDWARF that restrict symbol
searches when a namespace is passed in.
llvm-svn: 141847