Summary:
SymbolFile classes are responsible for creating CompileUnit instances
and they already need to have a notion of the id<->CompileUnit mapping
(because of APIs like ParseCompileUnitAtIndex). However, the
SymbolVendor has remained as the thing responsible for caching created
units (which the SymbolFiles were calling via convoluted constructs like
"m_obj_file->GetModule()->GetSymbolVendor()->SetCompileUnitAtIndex(...)").
This patch moves the responsibility of caching the units into the
SymbolFile class. It does this by moving the implementation of
SymbolVendor::{GetNumCompileUnits,GetCompileUnitAtIndex} into the
equivalent SymbolFile functions. The SymbolVendor functions become just
a passthrough much like the rest of SymbolVendor.
The original implementations of SymbolFile::GetNumCompileUnits is moved
to "CalculateNumCompileUnits", and are made protected, as the "Get"
function is the external api of the class.
SymbolFile::ParseCompileUnitAtIndex is made protected for the same
reason.
This is the first step in removing the SymbolVendor indirection, as
proposed in
<http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2019-June/015071.html>. After
removing all interesting logic from the SymbolVendor class, I'll proceed
with removing the indirection itself.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65089
llvm-svn: 366791
Instead of having to write FileSpecList::Append(FileSpec(args)) you can
now call FileSpecList::EmplaceBack(args), similar to
std::vector<>::emplace_back.
llvm-svn: 366489
Summary:
When dwo support was introduced, it used a trick where debug info
entries were referenced by the offset of the compile unit in the main
file, but the die offset was relative to the dwo file. Although there
was some elegance to it, this representation was starting to reach its
breaking point:
- the fact that the skeleton compile unit owned the DWO file meant that
it was impossible (or at least hard and unintuitive) to support DWO
files containing more than one compile unit. These kinds of files are
produced by LTO for example.
- it made it impossible to reference any DIEs in the skeleton compile
unit (although the skeleton units are generally empty, clang still
puts some info into them with -fsplit-dwarf-inlining).
- (current motivation) it made it very hard to support type units placed
in DWO files, as type units don't have any skeleton units which could
be referenced in the main file
This patch addresses this problem by introducing an new
"dwo_num" field to the DIERef class, whose purpose is to identify the
dwo file. It's kind of similar to the dwo_id field in DWARF5 unit
headers, but while this is a 64bit hash whose main purpose is to catch
file mismatches, this is just a smaller integer used to indentify a
loaded dwo file. Currently, this is based on the index of the skeleton
compile unit which owns the dwo file, but it is intended to be
eventually independent of that (to support the LTO use case).
Simultaneously the cu_offset is dropped to conserve space, as it is no
longer necessary. This means we can remove the "BaseObjectOffset" field
from the DWARFUnit class. It also means we can remove some of the
workarounds put in place to support the skeleton-unit+dwo-die combo.
More work is needed to remove all of them, which is out of scope of this
patch.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, aprantl
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, dexonsmith, arphaman, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63428
llvm-svn: 364009
Summary:
This patch makes the DIERef class always valid by default constructor
and operator bool. This allows one to express the validity of a DIERef
in the type system. Places which are working with potentially-invalid
DIERefs have been updated to use Optional<DIERef> instead.
The constructor taking a DWARFFormValue was not needed, as all places
which were constructing a DIERef this way were immediately converting it
into a DWARFDIE or a user_id. This can be done without constructing an
intermediate DIERef.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, aprantl
Subscribers: arphaman, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63399
llvm-svn: 363767
Summary:
A user_id_t carries the same information as a DIERef, but it takes up
less space.
Furthermore, DIERef::operator<'s implementation is very
questionable, as it does not take the cu_offset and section fields into
account. Using just the die offset was correct in the days when all
debug info lived in a single section, but since we started supporting
DWO debug info, this was no longer true. The comparison operator could
be fixed, but it seems like using the user_id_t for these purposes is a
better idea overall.
I think this did not cause any bugs, because the only place the
comparison operator was used is in m_function_scope_qualified_name_map,
and this one is local to a dwo file, but I am not 100% sure of that.
Reviewers: clayborg, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63322
llvm-svn: 363528
Previously it was storing a *pointer*, which left open the possibility
of this pointer being null. We never made use of that possibility (it
does not make sense), and most of the code was already assuming that.
However, there were a couple of null-checks scattered around the code.
This patch replaces the reference with a pointer, making the
non-null-ness explicit, and removes the remaining null-checks.
llvm-svn: 363381
In a dwo/debug_types world, the die offset is not enough to uniquely
idendify a debug info entry. Pass the the entire DIERef object instead.
This is technically NFC, because only AppleIndex implemented this
method (and there, the die offset *is* enough for unique
identification). However, this makes the code simpler, and simplifies
some of the follow-up patches.
llvm-svn: 363373
Summary:
Type units don't represent actual compilations and a lot of the
operations that we do with lldb compile units (getting their line
tables, variables, etc.) don't make sense for them. There is also a lot
more of them (sometimes over 100x), so making them more lightweight pays
off.
The main change in this patch is that we stop creating lldb CompileUnits
for DWARF type units. The trickiest part here is that the SymbolFile
interface requires that we assign consecutive sequence IDs to the
compile units we create. As DWARF type and compile units can come in any
order (in v5), this means we can no longer use 1-1 mapping between DWARF
and lldb compile units. Instead I build a translation table between the
two indices. To avoid pessimizing the case where there are no type
units, I build the translation table only in case we have at least one
type unit.
Additionaly, I also tried to strenghted type safete by replacing
DWARFUnit with DWARFCompileUnit where applicable. Though that was not
stricly necessary, I found it a good way to ensure that the
transformations I am doing here make sense. In the places where I was
changing the function signatures, and where it was obvious that the
objects being handled were not null, I also replaced pointers with
references.
There shouldn't be any major functional change with this patch. The only
change I observed is that now the types in the type units will not be
parsed when one calls Module::ParseAllDebugSymbols, unless they are
referenced from other compile units. This makes sense, given how
ParseAllDebugSymbols is implemented (it iterates over all compile
units), and it only matters for one hand-writted test where I did not
bother to reference the types from the compile units (which I now do).
Reviewers: clayborg, JDevlieghere, aprantl
Subscribers: jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63005
llvm-svn: 363250
Summary:
This patch creates a cache of file lists in line tables referenced by
type units. This cache is used to avoid parsing a line table twice
(since a file list will generally be shared by many type units).
It also sets things up in a way that parsing of DW_AT_decl_file
attributes will keep working even when we stop creating lldb compile
units for dwarf type units, but it stops short of actually doing that.
This means that the request for files now go directly to SymbolFileDWARF
instead of being routed there indirectly via the
lldb_private::CompileUnit class.
As a result of this, a number of occurences of SymbolContext variables
in DWARFASTParserClang have become unused, so I remove them.
This patch reduces the number of times a file list is being parsed, but
the situation is still suboptimal, as the parsed list is being copied
multiple times. This will be fixed when we stop creating CompileUnits
for DWARF type units.
Reviewers: clayborg, aprantl, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62894
llvm-svn: 363143
This reverts commit 58afc1bdebf9fa8b178d6c9d89af94c5cc091760.
This commit caused the test suite on macOS to fail many tests. It
appears that setting breakpoints is the issue. One example that fails
is the lit test Breakpoint/case-sensitive.test.
llvm-svn: 362862
Summary:
The DWARFCompileUnit is set as the "user data" of the lldb compile unit
directly in the constructor (see ParseCompileUnit).
This means that instead of going through unit indexes, we can just fetch
the DWARF unit directly from there.
Reviewers: clayborg, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: aprantl, jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62943
llvm-svn: 362783
Summary:
This code is modifying a support file list after it has been created.
This makes it hard to share the file list between type units and
compile units in DWARF. It's not a total showstopper, but supporting
this while also sharing the lists would make things more complicated.
Given that this was added to support a project which never fully
materialised, and that even back then there were some concerns about the
correctness of this approach (according to D11003#200772 the compile
unit name is not guaranteed to be the first one in the support file
list), I think we should just delete this workaround.
Reviewers: clayborg, tberghammer, dsrbecky
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62517
llvm-svn: 361948
Summary:
debug_ranges got renamed to debug_rnglists in DWARF 5. Prior to this
patch lldb was just picking the first section it could find in the file,
and using that for all address ranges lookups. This is not correct in
case the file contains a mixture of compile units with various standard
versions (not a completely unlikely scenario).
In this patch I make lldb support reading from both sections
simulaneously, and decide the correct section to use based on the
version number of the compile unit. SymbolFileDWARF::DebugRanges is
split into GetDebugRanges and GetDebugRngLists (the first one is renamed
mainly so we can catch all incorrect usages).
I tried to structure the code similarly to how llvm handles this logic
(hence DWARFUnit::FindRnglistFromOffset/Index), but the implementations
are still relatively far from each other.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62302
llvm-svn: 361938
Like many of our DWARF classes, the DWARFExpression can be initialized
in several ways. One such way was through a constructor that takes just
the compile unit. This constructor is used to initialize both empty
DWARFExpressions, and DWARFExpression that will be populated later.
To make the distinction more clear, I changed the constructor to a
default constructor and updated its call sites. Where the
DWARFExpression was being populated later, I replaced that with a call
to the copy assignment constructor.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62425
llvm-svn: 361849
These variables were useful when looking up the compile unit index
required a binary search. Now that we can look up a compile unit index
in constant time, they are no longer needed.
llvm-svn: 361754
The fix form sizes use to have two arrays: one for 4 byte addresses and in for 8 byte addresses. The table had an issue where DW_FORM_flag_present wasn't being represented as a fixed size form because its actual size _is_ zero and zero was used to indicate the form isn't fixed in size. Any code that needed to quickly access the DWARF had to get a FixedFormSizes instance using the address byte size.
This fix cleans things up by adding a DWARFFormValue::GetFixedSize() both as a static method and as a member function on DWARFFormValue. It correctly can indicate if a form size is zero. This cleanup is a precursor to a follow up patch where I hope to speed up DWARF parsing.
I verified performance doesn't regress by loading hundreds of DWARF files and setting a breakpoint by file and line and by name in files that do not have DWARF indexes. Performance remained consistent between the two approaches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62416
llvm-svn: 361675
Summary:
NFC = [[ https://llvm.org/docs/Lexicon.html#nfc | Non functional change ]]
This commit is the result of modernizing the LLDB codebase by using
`nullptr` instread of `0` or `NULL`. See
https://clang.llvm.org/extra/clang-tidy/checks/modernize-use-nullptr.html
for more information.
This is the command I ran and I to fix and format the code base:
```
run-clang-tidy.py \
-header-filter='.*' \
-checks='-*,modernize-use-nullptr' \
-fix ~/dev/llvm-project/lldb/.* \
-format \
-style LLVM \
-p ~/llvm-builds/debug-ninja-gcc
```
NOTE: There were also changes to `llvm/utils/unittest` but I did not
include them because I felt that maybe this library shall be updated in
isolation somehow.
NOTE: I know this is a rather large commit but it is a nobrainer in most
parts.
Reviewers: martong, espindola, shafik, #lldb, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: arsenm, jvesely, nhaehnle, hiraditya, JDevlieghere, teemperor, rnkovacs, emaste, kubamracek, nemanjai, ki.stfu, javed.absar, arichardson, kbarton, jrtc27, MaskRay, atanasyan, dexonsmith, arphaman, jfb, jsji, jdoerfert, lldb-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #lldb, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61847
llvm-svn: 361484
Summary:
This patch introduces the DWARFTypeUnit class, and teaches lldb to parse
type units out of both the debug_types section (DWARF v4), and from the
regular debug_info section (DWARF v5).
The most important piece of functionality - resolving DW_AT_signatures
to connect type forward declarations to their definitions - is not
implemented here, but even without that, a lot of functionality becomes
available. I've added tests for the commands that start to work after
this patch.
The changes in this patch were greatly inspired by D61505, which in turn took
over changes from D32167.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, aprantl
Subscribers: mgorny, jankratochvil, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62008
llvm-svn: 361360
In D61502#1503247 @clayborg suggested that SymbolFileDWARF *dwarf2Data is
really redundant in all the calls with also having DWARFUnit *cu. So remove it.
One `SymbolFileDWARF *` nullptr check
(DWARFDebugInfoEntry::GetDIENamesAndRanges) could be removed, other two nullptr
checks (DWARFDebugInfoEntry::GetName and DWARFDebugInfoEntry::AppendTypeName)
need to stay in place (now for `DWARFUnit *`).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62011
llvm-svn: 361277
This moves the sections from SymbolFileDWARF to DWARFContext, where it
was trivial to do so. A couple of sections are still left in
SymbolFileDWARF. These will be handled by separate patches.
llvm-svn: 361127
Summary:
The previous attempt and moving section handling over to DWARFContext
(D59611) failed because it did not take into account the dwo sections
correctly. All DWARFContexts (even those in SymbolFileDWARFDwo) used the
main module for loading the sections, but in the dwo scenario some
sections should come from the dwo file.
This patch fixes that by making the DWARFContext aware of whether it a
dwo context or a regular one. A dwo context gets two sections lists, and
it knows where to look for a particular type of a section. This isn't
fully consistent with how the llvm DWARFContext behaves, because that
one leaves it up to the user to know whether it should ask for a dwo
section or not. However, for the time being, it seems useful to have a
single entity which knows how to peice together the debug info in dwo
and non-dwo scenarios. The rough roadmap for the future is:
- port over the rest of the sections to DWARFContext
- find a way to get rid of SymbolFileDWARFDwo/Dwp/DwpDwo. This will
likely involve adding the ability for the DWARFContext to spawn
dwo sub-contexts, similarly to how it's done in llvm.
- get rid of the special handling of the "dwo" contexts by making
sure everything knows whether it should ask for the .dwo version of
the section or not (similarly to how llvm's DWARFUnits do that)
To demonstrate how the DWARFContext should behave in this new world, I
port the debug_info section (which is debug_info.dwo in the dwo file)
handling to DWARFContext. The rest of the sections will come in
subsequent patches.
Reviewers: aprantl, clayborg, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: zturner, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62012
llvm-svn: 361000
Summary:
This patch adds the ability to precisely address debug info in
situations when a single file can have more than one debug-info-bearing
sections (as is the case with type units in DWARF v4).
The changes here can be classified into roughly three categories:
- the code which addresses a debug info by offset gets an additional
argument, which specifies the section one should look into.
- the DIERef class also gets an additional member variable specifying
the section. This way, code dealing with DIERefs can know which
section is the object referring to.
- the user_id_t encoding steals one bit from the dwarf_id field to store
the section. This means the total number of separate object files
(apple .o, or normal .dwo) is limited to 2 billion, but that is fine
as it's not possible to hit that number without switching to DWARF64
anyway.
This patch is functionally equivalent to (and inspired by) the two
patches (D61503 and D61504) by Jan Kratochvil, but there are differences
in the implementation:
- it uses an enum instead of a bool flag to differentiate the sections
- it increases the size of DIERef struct instead of reducing the amount
of addressable debug info
- it sets up DWARFDebugInfo to store the units in a single vector
instead of two. This sets us up for the future in which type units can
also live in the debug_info section, and I believe it's cleaner
because there's no need for unit index remapping
There are no tests with this patch as this is essentially NFC until
we start parsing type units from the debug_types section.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, aprantl
Subscribers: arphaman, jankratochvil, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61908
llvm-svn: 360872
So far dw_offset_t was global for the whole SymbolFileDWARF but with
.debug_types the same dw_offset_t may mean two different things depending on
its section (=CU). So references now return whole new referenced DWARFDIE
instead of just dw_offset_t.
This means that some functions have to now handle 16 bytes instead of 8 bytes
but I do not see that anywhere performance critical.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61502
llvm-svn: 360795
Summary:
Instead of using the offset of the contained compile unit, we use it's
ID. The goal of this change is two-fold:
- free up space in the user_id_t representation to enable storing the
debug-info-carrying section (debug_types/debug_info) without
decreasing the amount of debug info we can address (as would be the
case with D61503).
- be a step towards supporting DWO files containing more than one unit
(important for debug_types+dwo, but can also happen with regular
dwo+lto). For this part to fully work we'd still need to add a way to
lookup the SymbolFileDWO without going through GetCompileUnitAtIndex,
but making sure things don't accidentally work because the SymbolFile
ID is the same as compile unit offset is a step towards that.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, aprantl
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, dexonsmith, tberghammer, jankratochvil, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61783
llvm-svn: 360565
D42892 changed a lot of code to use superclass DWARFUnit instead of its
subclass DWARFCompileUnit.
Finish this change more thoroughly for any *CompileUnit* -> *Unit* names.
Later patch will introduce DWARFTypeUnit which needs to be sometimes different
from DWARFCompileUnit and it would be confusing without this renaming.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61501
llvm-svn: 360443
Summary:
The logic for translating a user_id into a DWARFDIE was replicated in
several places. This removes that redundancy and settles on a single
implementation in SymbolFileDWARF.
The reason for choosing that instead of DIERef was that we were
always immediately converting the returned DIERef into a DWARFDIE
anyway, which meant that one had to specify the SymbolFileDWARF argument
twice (once to get the DIERef, and once to get the actual DIE). Also,
passing a higher-level object (SymbolFileDWARF) into a lower-level one
(DIERef) seemed like a less intuitive arrangement than doing things the
other way around.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, aprantl
Subscribers: tberghammer, jankratochvil, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61648
llvm-svn: 360246
Summary:
The implementation of GetID used a relatively complicated algorithm,
which returned some kind of an offset of the unit in some file
(depending on the debug info flavour). The only thing this ID was used
for was to enable subseqent retrieval of the unit from the SymbolFile.
This can be made simpler if we just make the "ID" of the unit an index
into the list of the units belonging to the symbol file. We already
support indexed access to the units, so each unit already has a well
"index" -- this just makes it accessible from within the unit.
To make the distincion between "id" and "offset" clearer (and help catch
any misuses), I also rename DWARFDebugInfo::GetCompileUnit (which
accesses by offset) into DWARFDebugInfo::GetCompileUnitAtOffset.
On its own, this only brings a minor simplification, but it enables
further simplifications in the DIERef class (coming in a follow-up
patch).
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, aprantl
Subscribers: arphaman, jdoerfert, lldb-commits, tberghammer, jankratochvil
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61481
llvm-svn: 360014
Summary:
This check seems unnecessary as we already assert the same condition above and also access `sc.comp_unit`
before this check.
Reviewers: aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61394
llvm-svn: 359813
Before a Debugger gets a Target, target settings are routed to a global set
of settings. Even without this, some part of the LLDB which exist independently
of the Debugger object (the Module cache, the Symbol vendors, ...) access
directly the global default store for those settings.
Of course, if you modify one of those global settings while they are being read,
bad things happen. We see this quite a bit with FileSpecList settings. In
particular, we see many cases where one debug session changes
target.exec-search-paths while another session starts up and it crashes when
one of those accesses invalid FileSpecs.
This patch addresses the specific FileSpecList issue by adding locking to
OptionValueFileSpecList and never returning by reference.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60468
llvm-svn: 359028
A lot of comments in LLDB are surrounded by an ASCII line to delimit the
begging and end of the comment.
Its use is not really consistent across the code base, sometimes the
lines are longer, sometimes they are shorter and sometimes they are
omitted. Furthermore, it looks kind of weird with the 80 column limit,
where the comment actually extends past the line, but not by much.
Furthermore, when /// is used for Doxygen comments, it looks
particularly odd. And when // is used, it incorrectly gives the
impression that it's actually a Doxygen comment.
I assume these lines were added to improve distinguishing between
comments and code. However, given that todays editors and IDEs do a
great job at highlighting comments, I think it's worth to drop this for
the sake of consistency. The alternative is fixing all the
inconsistencies, which would create a lot more churn.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60508
llvm-svn: 358135
This reverts commit r356682 because it breaks the DWO flavours of some
tests:
lldb-Suite :: lang/c/const_variables/TestConstVariables.py
lldb-Suite :: lang/c/local_variables/TestLocalVariables.py
lldb-Suite :: lang/c/vla/TestVLA.py
llvm-svn: 356773
This is mostly mechanical, and just moves the remaining non-DWO
related sections over to DWARFContext.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59611
llvm-svn: 356682
LLVM's DWARF parsing library has a class called DWARFContext which holds
all of the various DWARF data sections and lots of other information.
LLDB's on the other hand stores all of this directly in SymbolFileDWARF
/ SymbolFileDWARFDwo and passes this interface around through the
parsing library. Obviously this is incompatible with a world where the
low level interface does not depend on the high level interface, so we
need to move towards a model similar to LLVM's - i.e. all of the context
needed for low level parsing should be in a single class, and that class
gets passed around.
This patch is a small incremental step towards achieving this. The
interface and internals deviate from LLVM's for technical reasons, but
the high level idea is the same. The goal is, eventually, to remove all
occurrences of SymbolFileDWARF from the low level parsing code.
For now I've chosen a very simple section - the .debug_aranges section
to move into DWARFContext while leaving everything else unchanged. In
the short term this is a bit confusing because now the information you
need might come from either of 2 different locations. But it's a huge
refactor to do this all at once and runs a much higher risk of breaking
things. So I think it would be wise to do this in very small pieces.
TL;DR - No functional change
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59562
llvm-svn: 356612
All of this is code that is unreferenced. Removing as much of
this as possible makes it more easy to determine what functionality
is missing and/or shared between LLVM and LLDB's DWARF interfaces.
llvm-svn: 356509
This continues the work of introducing Error and Expected into
the DWARF parsing interfaces, this time for the DWARFCompileUnit
and DWARFDebugAranges classes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59381
llvm-svn: 356278
The goal here is to improve our error handling and error recovery while
parsing DWARF, while at the same time getting us closer to being able to
merge LLDB's DWARF parser with LLVM's. To this end, I've udpated several
of the low-level parsing functions in LLDB to return llvm::Error and
llvm::Expected.
For now, this only updates LLDB parsing functions and not LLVM. In some
ways, this actually gets us *farther* from parity with the two
interfaces, because prior to this patch, at least the parsing interfaces
were the same (i.e. they all just returned bools, and now with this
patch they're diverging). But, I chose to do this for two primary
reasons.
LLDB has error logging code engrained deep within some of its parsing
functions. We don't want to lose this logging information, but obviously
LLVM has no logging mechanism at all. So if we're to merge the
interfaces, we have to find a way to still allow LLDB to properly report
parsing errors while not having the reporting code be inside of LLVM.
LLDB (and indeed, LLVM) overload the meaning of the false return value
from all of these extraction functions to mean both "We reached the null
entry at the end of a list of items, therefore everything was
successful" as well as "something bad and unrecoverable happened during
parsing". So you would have a lot code that would do something like:
while (foo.extract(...)) {
...
}
But when the loop stops, why did it stop? Did it stop because it
finished parsing, or because there was an error? Because of this, in
some cases we don't always know whether it is ok to proceed, or how to
proceed, but we were doing it anyway.
In this patch, I solve the second problem by introducing an
enumeration called DWARFEnumState which has two values MoreItems and
Complete. Both of these indicate success, but the latter indicates
that we reached the null entry. Then, I return this value instead of
bool, and convey parsing failure separately.
To solve the first problem (and convey parsing failure) these
functions now return either llvm::Error or llvm::Expected<DWARFEnumState>.
Having this extra bit of information allows us to properly convey all 3 of
"error, bail out", "success, call this function again", and "success,
don't call this function again".
In subsequent patches I plan to extend this pattern to the rest of the
parsing interfaces, which will ultimately get all of the log statements
and error reporting out of the low level parsing code and into the high
level parsing code (e.g. SymbolFileDWARF, DWARFASTParserClang, etc).
Eventually, these same changes will have to be backported to LLVM's
DWARF parser, but diverging in the short term is the easiest way to
converge in the long term.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59370
llvm-svn: 356190
LLVM doesn't produce DWARF64, and neither does GCC. LLDB's support
for DWARF64 is only partial, and if enabled appears to also not work.
Finally, it's untested. Removing this makes merging LLVM and
LLDB's DWARF parsing implementations simpler.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59235
llvm-svn: 355975
This is a very thin wrapper over a std::vector<DWARFDIE> and does
not seem to provide any real value over just using a container
directly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59165
llvm-svn: 355974
Summary:
This patch marks the inline namespaces from DWARF as inline and also ensures that looking
up declarations now follows the lookup rules for inline namespaces.
Reviewers: aprantl, shafik, serge-sans-paille
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: eraman, jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Tags: #c_modules_in_lldb, #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59198
llvm-svn: 355897
My apologies for the large patch. With the exception of ConstString.h
itself it was entirely produced by sed.
ConstString has exactly one const char * data member, so passing a
ConstString by reference is not any more efficient than copying it by
value. In both cases a single pointer is passed. But passing it by
value makes it harder to accidentally return the address of a local
object.
(This fixes rdar://problem/48640859 for the Apple folks)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59030
llvm-svn: 355553
This was reverted because it breaks the GreenDragon bot, but
the reason for the breakage is lost, so I'm resubmitting this
now so we can find out what the problem is.
llvm-svn: 355528
Given that we have a target named Symbols, one wonders why a
file named Symbols.cpp is not in this target. To be clear,
the functions exposed from this file are really focused on
*locating* a symbol file on a given host, which is where the
ambiguity comes in. However, it makes more sense conceptually
to be in the Symbols target. While some of the specific places
to search for symbol files might change depending on the Host,
this is not inherently true in the same way that, for example,
"accessing the file system" or "starting threads" is
fundamentally dependent on the Host.
PDBs, for example, recently became a reality on non-Windows platforms,
and it's theoretically possible that DSYMs could become a thing on non
MacOSX platforms (maybe in a remote debugging scenario). Other types of
symbol files, such as DWO, DWP, etc have never been tied to any Host
platform anyway.
After this patch, there is only one remaining dependency from
Host to Target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58730
llvm-svn: 355032
Host had a function to get the UnixSignals instance corresponding
to the current host architecture. This means that Host had to
include a file from Target. To break this dependency, just make
this a static function directly in UnixSignals. We already have
the function UnixSignals::Create(ArchSpec) anyway, so we just
need to have UnixSignals::CreateForHost() which determines which
value to pass for the ArchSpec.
The goal here is to eventually break the Host->Target->Host
circular dependency.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57780
llvm-svn: 354168
This patch properly extracts the full submodule path as well as its
search paths from DWARF import decls and passes it on to the
ClangModulesDeclVendor.
rdar://problem/47970144
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58090
llvm-svn: 353961
The `ap` suffix is a remnant of lldb's former use of auto pointers,
before they got deprecated. Although all their uses were replaced by
unique pointers, some variables still carried the suffix.
In r353795 I removed another auto_ptr remnant, namely redundant calls to
::get for unique_pointers. Jim justly noted that this is a good
opportunity to clean up the variable names as well.
I went over all the changes to ensure my find-and-replace didn't have
any undesired side-effects. I hope I didn't miss any, but if you end up
at this commit doing a git blame on a weirdly named variable, please
know that the change was unintentional.
llvm-svn: 353912
Unlike std::make_unique, which is only available since C++14,
std::make_shared is available since C++11. Not only is std::make_shared
a lot more readable compared to ::reset(new), it also performs a single
heap allocation for the object and control block.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57990
llvm-svn: 353764
This is a continuation of my quest to make the size 0 a supported value.
This reapplies r352394 with additional PDB parser fixes prepared by
Pavel Labath!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57273
llvm-svn: 352521
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
Summary:
If we opened a file which was produced on system with different path
syntax, we would parse the paths from the debug info incorrectly.
The reason for that is that we would parse the paths as they were
native. For example this meant that on linux we would treat the entire
windows path as a single file name with no directory component, and then
we would concatenate that with the single directory component from the
DW_AT_comp_dir attribute. When parsing posix paths on windows, we would
at least get the directory separators right, but we still would treat
the posix paths as relative, and concatenate them where we shouldn't.
This patch attempts to remedy this by guessing the path syntax used in
each compile unit. (Unfortunately, there is no info in DWARF which would
give the definitive path style used by the produces, so guessing is all
we can do.) Currently, this guessing is based on the DW_AT_comp_dir
attribute of the compile unit, but this can be refined later if needed
(for example, the DW_AT_name of the compile unit may also contain some
useful info). This style is then used when parsing the line table of
that compile unit.
This patch is sufficient to make the line tables come out right, and
enable breakpoint setting by file name work correctly. Setting a
breakpoint by full path still has some kinks (specifically, using a
windows-style full path will not work on linux because the path will be
parsed as a linux path), but this will require larger changes in how
breakpoint setting works.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56543
llvm-svn: 351328
This parameter was only ever used with the Module set, and
since a SymbolFile is tied to a module, the parameter turns
out to be entirely unnecessary. Furthermore, it doesn't make
a lot of sense to ask a caller to ask SymbolFile which is tied
to Module X to find types for Module Y, but that possibility
was open with the previous interface. By removing this
parameter from the API, it makes it harder to use incorrectly
as well as easier for an implementor to understand what it
needs to do.
llvm-svn: 351133
Every callsite was passing an empty SymbolContext, so this parameter
had no effect. Inside the DWARF implementation of this function,
however, there was one codepath that checked members of the
SymbolContext. Since no call-sites actually ever used this
functionality, it was essentially dead code, so I've deleted this
code path as well.
llvm-svn: 351132
This method took a SymbolContext but only actually cared about the
case where the m_function member was set. Furthermore, it was
intended to be implemented to parse blocks recursively despite not
documenting this in its name. So we change the name to indicate
that it should be recursive, while also limiting the function
parameter to be a Function&. This lets the caller know what is
required to use it, as well as letting new implementers know what
kind of inputs they need to be prepared to handle.
llvm-svn: 351131
Previously all of these functions accepted a SymbolContext&.
While a CompileUnit is one member of a SymbolContext, there
are also many others, and by passing such a monolithic parameter
in this way it makes the requirements and assumptions of the
API unclear for both callers as well as implementors.
All these methods need is a CompileUnit. By limiting the
parameter type in this way, we simplify the code as well as
make it self-documenting for both implementers and users.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56564
llvm-svn: 350943
The function SymbolFile::ParseTypes previously accepted a SymbolContext.
This makes it extremely difficult to implement faithfully, because you
have to account for all possible combinations of members being set in
the SymbolContext. On the other hand, no clients of this function
actually care about implementing this function to this strict of a
standard. AFAICT, there is actually only 1 client in the entire
codebase, and it is the function ParseAllDebugSymbols, which is itself
only called for testing purposes when dumping information. At this
call-site, the only field it sets is the CompileUnit, meaning that an
implementer of a SymbolFile need not worry about any examining or
handling any other fields which might be set.
By restricting this API to accept exactly a CompileUnit& and nothing
more, we can simplify the life of new SymbolFile plugin implementers by
making it clear exactly what the necessary and sufficient set of
functionality they need to implement is, while at the same time removing
some dead code that tried to handle other types of SymbolContext fields
that were never going to be set anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56462
llvm-svn: 350889
Summary:
instead of returning the architecture through by-ref argument and a
boolean value indicating success, we can just return the ArchSpec
directly. Since the ArchSpec already has an invalid state, it can be
used to denote the failure without the additional bool.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner, espindola
Subscribers: emaste, arichardson, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56129
llvm-svn: 350291
This patch simplifies boolean expressions acorss LLDB. It was generated
using clang-tidy with the following command:
run-clang-tidy.py -checks='-*,readability-simplify-boolean-expr' -format -fix $PWD
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55584
llvm-svn: 349215
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
Clang recently improved its DWARF support for C VLA types. The DWARF
now looks like this:
0x00000051: DW_TAG_variable [4]
DW_AT_location( fbreg -32 )
DW_AT_name( "__vla_expr" )
DW_AT_type( {0x000000d3} ( long unsigned int ) )
DW_AT_artificial( true )
...
0x000000da: DW_TAG_array_type [10] *
DW_AT_type( {0x000000cc} ( int ) )
0x000000df: DW_TAG_subrange_type [11]
DW_AT_type( {0x000000e9} ( __ARRAY_SIZE_TYPE__ ) )
DW_AT_count( {0x00000051} )
Without this patch LLDB will naively interpret the DIE offset 0x51 as
the static size of the array, which is clearly wrong. This patch
extends ValueObject::GetNumChildren to query the dynamic properties of
incomplete array types.
See the testcase for an example:
4 int foo(int a) {
5 int vla[a];
6 for (int i = 0; i < a; ++i)
7 vla[i] = i;
8
-> 9 pause(); // break here
10 return vla[a-1];
11 }
(lldb) fr v vla
(int []) vla = ([0] = 0, [1] = 1, [2] = 2, [3] = 3)
(lldb) quit
rdar://problem/21814005
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53530
llvm-svn: 346165
This is useful for investigating the clang ast as you reconstruct
it via by parsing debug info. It can also be used to write tests
against.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54072
llvm-svn: 346149
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 patch removes the GetByteSize method from FileSpec and updates its
uses with calls to the FileSystem.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53788
llvm-svn: 345812
This patch extends the FileSystem class with a bunch of functions that
are currently implemented as methods of the FileSpec class. These
methods will be removed in future commits and replaced by calls to the
file system.
The new functions are operated in terms of the virtual file system which
was recently moved from clang into LLVM so it could be reused in lldb.
Because the VFS is stateful, we turned the FileSystem class into a
singleton.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53532
llvm-svn: 345783
This is similar to D53597, but following up with 2 more enums.
After this, all flag enums should be strongly typed all the way
through to the symbol files plugins.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53616
llvm-svn: 345314
When we get the `resolve_scope` parameter from the SB API, it's a
`uint32_t`. We then pass it through all of LLDB this way, as a uint32.
This is unfortunate, because it means the user of an API never actually
knows what they're dealing with. We can call it something like
`resolve_scope` and have comments saying "this is a value from the
`SymbolContextItem` enumeration, but it makes more sense to just have it
actually *be* the correct type in the actual C++ type system to begin
with. This way the person reading the code just knows what it is.
The reason to use integers instead of enumerations for flags is because
when you do bitwise operations on enumerations they get promoted to
integers, so it makes it tedious to constantly be casting them back
to the enumeration types, so I've introduced a macro to make this
happen magically. By writing LLDB_MARK_AS_BITMASK_ENUM after defining
an enumeration, it will define overloaded operators so that the
returned type will be the original enum. This should address all
the mechanical issues surrounding using rich enum types directly.
This way, we get a better debugger experience, and new users to
the codebase can get more easily acquainted with the codebase because
their IDE features can help them understand what the types mean.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53597
llvm-svn: 345313
With the fix: do not forget to hanlde the DW_RLE_start_end, which seems was
omited/forgotten/removed by mistake.
Original commit message:
The patch implements the support for DW_RLE_base_address and DW_RLE_offset_pair
.debug_rnglists entries
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53140
----
Added : /lldb/trunk/lit/Breakpoint/Inputs/debug_rnglist_offset_pair.yaml
Added : /lldb/trunk/lit/Breakpoint/debug_rnglist_offset_pair.test
Modified : /lldb/trunk/source/Plugins/SymbolFile/DWARF/DWARFDebugInfoEntry.cpp
Modified : /lldb/trunk/source/Plugins/SymbolFile/DWARF/DWARFDebugRanges.cpp
Modified : /lldb/trunk/source/Plugins/SymbolFile/DWARF/DWARFDebugRanges.h
Modified : /lldb/trunk/source/Plugins/SymbolFile/DWARF/SymbolFileDWARF.cpp
Modified : /lldb/trunk/source/Plugins/SymbolFile/DWARF/SymbolFileDWARF.h
llvm-svn: 345251
The patch implements the support for DW_RLE_base_address and DW_RLE_offset_pair
.debug_rnglists entries
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53140
llvm-svn: 345127
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
As discussed with Greg at the dev meeting, we need to ensure we have the
module lock in the SymbolFile. Usually the symbol file is accessed
through the symbol vendor which ensures that the necessary locks are
taken. However, there are a few methods that are accessed by the
expression parser and were lacking the lock.
This patch adds the locking where necessary and everywhere else asserts
that we actually already own the lock.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52543
llvm-svn: 344945
There are several places that call `FindRanges`,
all of them use `Slide` to adjust the ranges found
by the base address.
All except one, which does the same manually in a loop.
Patch updates it to use `Slide` for consistency.
llvm-svn: 344122
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 teaches lldb to detect when there are missing frames in a
backtrace due to a sequence of tail calls, and to fill in the backtrace
with artificial tail call frames when this happens. This is only done
when the execution history can be determined from the call graph and
from the return PC addresses of calls on the stack. Ambiguous sequences
of tail calls (e.g anything involving tail calls and recursion) are
detected and ignored.
Depends on D49887.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50478
llvm-svn: 343900
This is a follow-up to https://reviews.llvm.org/D46362.
When evaluating a complex expression in DWARFExpression::Evaluate,
file addresses must be resolved to load addresses before we can
perform operations such as DW_OP_deref on them.
For this the address goes through three steps
1. Read the file address as stored in the DWARF
2. Link/relocate the file address (when reading from a .dSYM, this is a no-op)
3. Convert the file address to a load address.
D46362 implemented step (3) by resolving the file address using the
Module that the original DWARF came from. In the case of a dSYM that
is correct, but when reading from .o files, we need to look up
relocated/linked addresses, so the right place to look them up is the
current frame's module. This patch fixes that by setting the
expression's Module to point to the linked debugmap object.
A word a bout the unorthodox testcase: The motivating testcase for
this fix is in Swift, but I managed to hand-modify LLVM-IR for a
trivial C program to exhibit the same problem, so we can fix this in
llvm.org.
rdar://problem/44689915
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52678
llvm-svn: 343612
This patch improves the support of DWARF5.
Particularly the reporting of source code locations.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51935
llvm-svn: 342153
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
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
With the recent changes in FileSpec to use LLVM's path style, it is
possible to delegate a bunch of common path operations to LLVM's path
helpers. This means we only have to maintain a single implementation and
at the same time can benefit from the efforts made by the rest of the
LLVM community.
This is part one of a set of patches. There was no obvious way to split
this so I just worked from top to bottom.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48084
llvm-svn: 334615
This also fixes a bug where SymbolFileDWARF was returning the same
function multiple times - this can happen if both mangled and demangled
names match the regex. Other lookup lookup functions had code to handle
this case, but it was forgotten here.
llvm-svn: 334277
Summary:
This patch adds the ability to lookup variables to the DWARF v5 index
class.
During review we discovered an inconsistency between how the existing
two indexes handle looking up qualified names of the variables:
- manual index would return a value if the input string exactly matched
the demangled name of some variable.
- apple index ignored the context and returned any variable with the
same base name.
So, this patch also rectifies that situation:
- it removes all context handling from the index classes. The
GetGlobalVariables functions now just take a base name. For manual
index, this meant we can stop putting demangled names into the
variable index (this matches the behavior for functions).
- context extraction is put into SymbolFileDWARF, so that it is common
to all indexes.
- additional filtering based on the context is also done in
SymbolFileDWARF. This is done via a simple substring search, which is
not ideal, but it matches what we are doing for functions (cf.
Module::LookupInfo::Prune).
Reviewers: clayborg, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47781
llvm-svn: 334181
Summary:
This patch adds the skeleton for implementing the DWARF v5 name index
class. All of the methods are stubbed out and will be implemented in
subsequent patches. The interesting part of the patch is the addition of
a "ignore-file-indexes" setting to the dwarf plugin which enables a
user to force using manual indexing path in lldb (for example as a
debugging aid). I have also added a test that verifies that file indexes
are used by default.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: mgorny, mehdi_amini, aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47629
llvm-svn: 334088
Now that Apple index determines method-ness straight from the debug
info, we don't need to resolve the functions into SymbolContexts inside
the Index classes. This removes the need for callback arguments and
allows us to pull the common parts out of the two implementations of
these functions back into the SymbolFileDWARF class.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47147
llvm-svn: 334004
Summary:
As discussed in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37317,
FindGlobalVariables does not properly handle the case where
append=false. As this doesn't seem to be used in the tree, this patch
removes the parameter entirely.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham, labath
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits, kubamracek, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46885
Patch by Tom Tromey <ttromey@mozilla.com>.
llvm-svn: 333639
As suggested by Pavel Labath in D46810 DWARFUnit::GetUnitDIEOnly() returning
a pointer to m_first_die should not permit using methods like GetFirstChild().
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47276
llvm-svn: 333224
Summary:
This places the `if(m_using_apple_tables)` branches inside the
SymbolFileDWARF class behind an abstract DWARFIndex class. The class
currently has two implementations:
- AppleIndex, which searches using .apple_names and friends
- ManualIndex, which searches using a manually built index
Most of the methods of the class are very simple, and simply extract the
list of DIEs for the given name from the appropriate sub-table. The main
exception are the two GetFunctions overloads, which take a couple of
extra paramenters, including some callbacks. It was not possible to
split these up the same way as other methods, as here we were doing a
lot of post-processing on the results. The post-processing is similar
for the two cases, but not identical. I hope to factor these further in
separate patches.
Other interesting methods are:
- Preload(): do any preprocessing to make lookups faster (noop for
AppleIndex, forces a build of the lookup tables for ManualIndex).
- ReportInvalidDIEOffset(): Used to notify the users of an invalid index
(prints a message for AppleIndex, noop for ManualIndex).
- Dump(): dumps the index state (noop for AppleIndex, prints the lookup
tables for ManualIndex).
Reviewers: clayborg, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: mgorny, aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46889
llvm-svn: 332719
This cleanup is designed to make the https://reviews.llvm.org/D32167 patch smaller and easier to read.
Cleanup in this patch:
Allow DWARFUnit subclasses to hand out the data that should be used when decoding data for a DIE. The information might be in .debug_info or could be in .debug_types. There is a new virtual function on DWARFUnit that each subclass must override:
virtual const lldb_private::DWARFDataExtractor &DWARFUnit::GetData() const;
This allows DWARFCompileUnit and eventually DWARFTypeUnit to hand out different data to be used when decoding the DIE information.
Add a new pure virtual function to get the size of the DWARF unit header:
virtual uint32_t DWARFUnit::GetHeaderByteSize() const = 0;
This allows DWARFCompileUnit and eventually DWARFTypeUnit to hand out different offsets where the first DIE starts when decoding DIE information from the unit.
Added a new function to DWARFDataExtractor to get the size of an offset:
size_t DWARFDataExtractor::GetDWARFSizeOfOffset() const;
Removed dead dumping and parsing code in the DWARFDebugInfo class.
Inlined a bunch of calls in DWARFUnit for accessors that were just returning integer member variables.
Renamed DWARFUnit::Size() to DWARFUnit::GetHeaderByteSize() as it clearly states what it is doing and makes more sense.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46606
llvm-svn: 331892
Summary:
Before this patch the two paths were doing very different things
- the apple path searched the .apple_names section, which contained
mangled names, as well as basenames of all functions. It returned any
name it found.
- the non-accelerated path looked in the "full name" index we built
ourselves, which contained mangled as well as demangled names of all
functions (but no basenames). Then however, if it did not find a match
it did an extra search in the basename index, with some special
handling for anonymous namespaces.
This aligns the two paths by changing the non-accelerated path to return
the same results as in the apple-tables one. In pratice, this means we
will search in both the "basename", "method" and "fullname" indexes (in
the manual indexes these are separate indexes. This means the function
will return some slightly inappropriate results (e.g. bar::baz::foo when
one asks for a "full name" foo), but this can be handled by additional
filtering, independently indexing method. I've also stopped inserting
demangled names into the "fullname" index, as that is inconsistent with
the apple path.
Reviewers: clayborg, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46576
llvm-svn: 331855
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
This fixes a bug where
(lldb) target var g_ptr
would populate the global variables list with exactly one entry
because SymbolFileDWARF::ParseVariables() was invoked with a list of
DIEs pre-filtered by name, such that a subsequent call to
(lldb) fr var --show-globals
would only list that one variable, because CompileUnit::m_variables
was already initialized, fooling CompileUnit::GetVariableList().
CompileUnit::GetVariableList() grabs the *complete* list of variables
via (SymbolFileDWARF, ...)::ParseVariablesForContext and that still
calls CompileUnit::SetVariableList(variables) which acts as the
caching mechanism.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46220
llvm-svn: 331230
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
Code commonly checks if the parent DIE is DW_TAG_compile_unit.
But DW_TAG_partial_unit also acts as DW_TAG_compile_unit for DWZ
as DWZ is using DW_TAG_imported_unit only at the top unit level.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40469
llvm-svn: 331194
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
This patch by Greg Clayton drops the virtualization for DWARFPartialUnit.
The virtualization of DWARFUnit now matches more its LLVM counterpart.
DWZ patchset is going to be implementable without DWARFPartialUnit remapping.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40474
This reverts commit 329423.
This reapplies commit r329305.
llvm-svn: 330084
The reverted commit changed DWARFUnit from https://reviews.llvm.org/D40466 and
https://reviews.llvm.org/D42892 that was prepared for DWARFPartialUnit and
made from it a superclass for DWARFTypeUnit. DWARFUnit's intention was:
DWARFUnit->DWARFSomeNameUnit->DWARFCompileUnit
DWARFUnit->DWARFSomeNameUnit->DWARFTypeUnit
DWARFUnit->DWARFPartialUnit
Discussed at: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45170
This reverts commit r329305.
llvm-svn: 329423
Many things that were in DWARFCompileUnit actually need to be in DWARFUnit. This patch moves all DWARFUnit specific things over into DWARFUnit and fixes the layering. This is in preparation for adding DWARFTypeUnit for the .debug_types patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45170
llvm-svn: 329305
Now the codebase can use the DWARFUnit superclass. It will make it later
seamlessly work also with DWARFPartialUnit for DWZ.
This patch is only a search-and-replace easily undone, nothing interesting
in it.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42892
llvm-svn: 327810
Summary:
The llvm function is equivalent to this one. Where possible I tried to
replace const char* with llvm::StringRef to avoid extra strlen
computations. In most places, I was able to track the c string back to
the ConstString it was created from.
I also create a test that verifies we are able to lookup names with
unicode characters, as a bug in the llvm compiler (it accidentally used
a different hash function) meant this was not working until recently.
This also removes the unused ExportTable class.
Reviewers: aprantl, davide
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43596
llvm-svn: 325927
Summary:
LLDB doesn't use this code, the code has no tests, and the code does suspicious
things like hashing pointers to strings instead of the strings themselves.
Subscribers: sanjoy, mgorny, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43202
llvm-svn: 324925
Initialize the default value of SymbolFileDWARF uuid with
the appropriately shifted DW_INVALID_OFFSET constant.
This change fixes the collision in the computation of DIE uid
(inside DIERef::GetUID) and incorrect CompileUnit lookup
(because of the misleading cu_offset value).
Test plan: make check-lldb
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42563
llvm-svn: 323832
This fixes a bug in -gmodules DWARF handling when debugging without a .dSYM bundle
that was particularly noticable when debugging LLVM itself.
Debugging without clang modules and DWO handling should be unaffected by this patch.
<rdar://problem/32436209>
llvm-svn: 321802
Summary:
These two functions were calling each other, while handling different
branches of the if(IsInMemory()). This had a reason at some point in the
past, but right now it's just confusing.
I resolve this by removing the MemoryMapSectionData function and
inlining the !IsInMemory branch into ReadSectionData. There isn't
anything mmap-related in this function anyway, as the decision whether
to mmap is handled at a higher level.
This is a preparatory step to make ObjectFileELF be able to decompress
compressed sections (I want to make sure that all calls reading section
data are routed through a single piece of code).
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: emaste, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41169
llvm-svn: 320705
DWO/DWP should not be indexed directly.
Instead, the corresponding base file should be used.
This diff adds an assert to DWARFCompileUnit::Index
and adjusts the methods
SymbolFileDWARF::FindCompleteObjCDefinitionTypeForDIE,
SymbolFileDWARF::GetObjCMethodDIEOffsets accordingly.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39825
llvm-svn: 318554
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
Previously LLDB required the DWP file
to be located next to the executable file.
This diff uses the helper function
Symbols::LocateExecutableSymbolFile to search for
DWP files in the standard locations for debug symbols.
Test plan:
Build a toy test example:
main.cpp
clang -gsplit-dwarf -g -O0 main.cpp -o main.exe
llvm-dwp -e main.exe -o main.exe.dwp
mkdir -p debug_symbols
mv main.exe.dwp debug_symbols/main.exe.dwp
Run lldb:
lldb
settings set target.debug-file-search-paths ./debug_symbols
file ./main.exe
br set --name f
run
Check that debugging works:
setting breakpoints, printing local variables.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38568
llvm-svn: 315387
FreeBSD kernel modules are actually relocatable (.o) ELF files and this
previously caused some issues for LLDB. This change addresses these when
using lldb to symbolicate FreeBSD kernel backtraces.
The major problems:
- Relocations were not being applied to the DWARF debug info despite
there being code to do this. Several issues prevented it from working:
- Relocations are computed at the same time as the symbol table, but
in the case of split debug files, symbol table parsing always
redirects to the primary object file, meaning that relocations would
never be applied in the debug file.
- There's actually no guarantee that the symbol table has been parsed
yet when trying to parse debug information.
- When actually applying relocations, it will segfault because the
object files are not mapped with MAP_PRIVATE and PROT_WRITE.
- LLDB returned invalid results when performing ordinary address-to-
symbol resolution. It turned out that the addresses specified in the
section headers were all 0, so LLDB believed all the sections had
overlapping "file addresses" and would sometimes return a symbol from
the wrong section.
Patch by Brian Koropoff
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38142
llvm-svn: 314672
Summary:
This allows for the stack size to be configured, which isn't
possible with std::thread. Prevents overflowing the stack when
performing complex operations in the task pool on darwin,
where the default pthread stack size is only 512kb.
This also moves TaskPool from Utility to Host.
Reviewers: labath, tberghammer, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37930
llvm-svn: 313637
When LLDB loads "external" modules it looks at the
presence of DW_AT_GNU_dwo_name.
However, when the already created module
(corresponding to .dwo itself) is being processed,
it will see the presence of DW_AT_GNU_dwo_name
(which contains the name of dwo file) and
will try to call ModuleList::GetSharedModule again.
In some cases (i.e. for empty files) Clang 4.0
generates a *.dwo file which has DW_AT_GNU_dwo_name,
but no DW_AT_comp_dir. In this case the method
ModuleList::GetSharedModule will fail and
the warning will be printed. To workaround this issue,
one can notice that in this case we don't actually need
to try to load the already loaded module (corresponding to .dwo).
Test plan: make check-all
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37295
llvm-svn: 313083
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
It was completly unused and broke the part of the encapsulation that
common code shouldn't depend on specific plugins or language specific
features.
llvm-svn: 311000
Current LLDB (that is without DWZ support) crashes accessing Fedora debug info:
READ of size 8 at 0x60200000ffc8 thread T0
#0 in DWARFDebugInfoEntry::BuildAddressRangeTable(SymbolFileDWARF*, DWARFCompileUnit const*, DWARFDebugAranges*) const tools/lldb/source/Plugins/SymbolFile/DWARF/DWARFDebugInfoEntry.cpp:1336
Greg Clayton: We will need a warning to be emitted in
SymbolFileDWARF::CalculateAbilities() stating we won't parse the DWARF due to
"unsupported DW_FORM value of 0x1f20".
Patch has been mostly written by Greg Clayton.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35622
llvm-svn: 309581
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
The function does not persist the callback, so using a lighter-weight
asbtraction seems appropriate.
Also tweak the signatures of the lambdas to match what the TaskMap
interface expects.
llvm-svn: 304924
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
Summary:
Many parallel tasks just want to iterate over all the possible numbers from 0 to N-1. Rather than enqueue N work items, instead just "map" the function across the requested integer space.
Reviewers: clayborg, labath, tberghammer, zturner
Reviewed By: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: zturner, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32757
Patch by Scott Smith <scott.smith@purestorage.com>.
llvm-svn: 302223
Loading a shared library can require a large amount of work; rather than do that serially for each library,
this patch will allow parallelization of the symbols and debug info name indexes.
From scott.smith@purestorage.comhttps://reviews.llvm.org/D32598
llvm-svn: 301609
LLDB uses clang::DeclContexts for lookups, and variables get put into
the DeclContext for their abstract origin. (The abstract origin is a
DWARF pointer that indicates the unique definition of inlined code.)
When the expression parser is looking for variables, it locates the
DeclContext for the current context. This needs to be done carefully,
though, e.g.:
__attribute__ ((always_inline)) void f(int a) {
{
int b = a * 2;
}
}
void g() {
f(3);
}
Here, if we're stopped in the inlined copy of f, we have to find the
DeclContext corresponding to the definition of f – its abstract
origin. Clang doesn't allow multiple functions with the same name and
arguments to exist. It also means that any variables we see must be
placed in the appropriate DeclContext.
[Bug 1]: When stopped in an inline block, the function
GetDeclContextDIEContainingDIE for that block doesn't properly
construct a DeclContext for the abstract origin for inlined
subroutines. That means we get duplicated function DeclContexts, but
function arguments only get put in the abstract origin's DeclContext,
and as a result when we try to look for them in nested contexts they
aren't found.
[Bug 2]: When stopped in an inline block, the DWARF (for space
reasons) doesn't explicitly point to the abstract origin for that
block. This means that the function GetClangDeclContextForDIE returns
a different DeclContext for each place the block is inlined. However,
any variables defined in the block have abstract origins, so they
will only get placed in the DeclContext for their abstract origin.
In this fix, I've introduced a test covering both of these issues,
and fixed them.
Bug 1 could be resolved simply by making sure we look up the abstract
origin for inlined functions when looking up their DeclContexts on
behalf of nested blocks.
For Bug 2, I've implemented an algorithm that makes the DeclContext
for a block be the containing DeclContext for the closest entity we
would find during lookup that has an abstract origin pointer. That
means that in the following situation:
{ // block 1
int a;
{ // block 2
int b;
}
}
if we looked up the DeclContext for block 2, we'd find the block
containing the abstract origin of b, and lookup would proceed
correctly because we'd see b and a. However, in the situation
{ // block 1
int a;
{ // block 2
}
}
since there isn't anything to look up in block 2, we can't determine
its abstract origin (and there is no such pointer in the DWARF for
blocks). However, we can walk up the parent chain and find a, and its
abstract origin lives in the abstract origin of block 1. So we simply
say that the DeclContext for block 2 is the same as the DeclContext
for block 1, which contains a. Lookups will return the same results.
Thanks to Jim Ingham for review and suggestions.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32375
llvm-svn: 301263
about this more I realized I could make the change isolated to
whether we decide an empty accelerator table is valid or not.
<rdar://problem/30867462>
llvm-svn: 297496
HasContent. If we have a valid accelerator table which has no
content, we want to depend on that (empty) table as the authoritative
source instead of reading through all the debug info for lookups.
<rdar://problem/30867462>
llvm-svn: 297441
This was originall reverted due to some test failures in
ModuleCache and TestCompDirSymlink. These issues have all
been resolved and the code now passes all tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30698
llvm-svn: 297300
this reverts r297116 because it breaks the unittests and
TestCompDirSymlink. The ModuleCache unit test is trivially fixable, but
the CompDirSymlink failure is a symptom of a deeper problem: llvm's stat
functionality is not a drop-in replacement for lldb's. The former is
based on stat(2) (which does symlink resolution), while the latter is
based on lstat(2) (which does not).
This also reverts subsequent build fixes (r297128, r297120, 297117) and
r297119 (Remove FileSpec dependency on FileSystem) which builds on top
of this.
llvm-svn: 297139
This deletes LLDB's FileType enumeration and replaces all
users, and all calls to functions that check whether a file
exists etc with corresponding calls to LLVM.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30624
llvm-svn: 297116
Changes wrt. previous version:
- add #include <atomic>: fix build on windows
- add extra {} around the string literals used to initialize
llvm::StringLiteral: fix gcc build
llvm-svn: 295442
Summary:
We currently have two log channel registration mechanisms. One uses a
set of function pointers and the other one is based on the
PluginManager.
The PluginManager dependency is unfortunate, as logging
is also used in lldb-server, and the PluginManager pulls in a lot of
classes which are not used in lldb-server.
Both approach have the problem that they leave too much to do for the
user, and so the individual log channels end up reimplementing command
line argument parsing, category listing, etc.
Here, I replace the PluginManager-based approach with a one. The new API
is more declarative, so the user only needs to specify the list of list
of channels, their descriptions, etc., and all the common tasks like
enabling/disabling categories are hadled by common code. I migrate the
LogChannelDWARF (only user of the PluginManager method) to the new API.
In the follow-up commits I'll replace the other channels with something
similar.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner, beanz
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29895
llvm-svn: 295190
Summary:
The std::call_once implementation in libstdc++ has problems on few systems: NetBSD, OpenBSD and Linux PPC. LLVM ships with a homegrown implementation llvm::call_once to help on these platforms.
This change is required in the NetBSD LLDB port. std::call_once with libstdc++ results with crashing the debugger.
Sponsored by <The NetBSD Foundation>
Reviewers: labath, joerg, emaste, mehdi_amini, clayborg
Reviewed By: labath, clayborg
Subscribers: #lldb
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29288
llvm-svn: 294202
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 diff
1. Adds a comment to ObjectFileELF.cpp about the current
approach to determining the OS.
2. Replaces the check in SymbolFileDWARF.cpp with a more robust one.
Test plan:
Built (on Linux) a test binary linked to a c++ shared library
which contains just an implementation of a function TestFunction,
the library (the binary itself) doesn't contain ELF notes
and EI_OSABI is set to System V.
Checked in lldb that now "p TestFunction()" works fine
(and doesn't work without this patch).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27380
llvm-svn: 288687
Summary:
Improve detection of global vs local variables.
Currently when a global variable is optimized out or otherwise has an unknown
location (DW_AT_location is empty) it gets reported as local.
I added two new heuristics:
- if a mangled name is present, the variable is global (or static)
- if DW_AT_location is present but invalid, the variable is global (or static)
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26908
llvm-svn: 287636
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
This updates getters and setters to use StringRef instead of
const char *. I tested the build on Linux, Windows, and OSX
and saw no build or test failures. I cannot test any BSD
or Android variants, however I expect the required changes
to be minimal or non-existant.
llvm-svn: 282079
It is a new attribute emitted by clang as a GNU extension and will
be part of Dwarf5. The purpose of the attribute is to specify a compile
unit level base value for all DW_AT_ranges to reduce the number of
relocations have to be done by the linker.
Fixes (at least partially): https://llvm.org/pr28826
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24514
llvm-svn: 281595
*** 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
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
Summary:
We were checking whether an attribute is in block form by getting the block data pointer, which
was not correct as the pointer be null even if the attribute is in block form. Other places in
the file already use the correct test.
To make this work, I've needed to add DW_FORM_exprlock to the list of "block" forms, which seems
correct as that is how we are parsing it.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22756
llvm-svn: 276735
I changed "m_is_optimized" in lldb_private::CompileUnit over to be a lldb::LazyBool so that it can be set to eLazyBoolCalculate if it needs to be parsed later. With SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap, we don't actually open the DWARF in the .o files for each compile unit until later, and we can't tell if a compile unit is optimized ahead of time. So to avoid pulling in all .o right away just so we can answer the questions of "is this compile unit optimized" we defer it until a point where we will have the compile unit parsed.
<rdar://problem/26068360>
llvm-svn: 274585
We had support that assumed that thread local data for a variable could be determined solely from the module in which the variable exists. While this work for linux, it doesn't work for Apple OSs. The DWARF for thread local variables consists of location opcodes that do something like:
DW_OP_const8u (x)
DW_OP_form_tls_address
or
DW_OP_const8u (x)
DW_OP_GNU_push_tls_address
The "x" is allowed to be anything that is needed to determine the location of the variable. For Linux "x" is the offset within the TLS data for a given executable (ModuleSP in LLDB). For Apple OS variants, it is the file address of the data structure that contains a pthread key that can be used with pthread_getspecific() and the offset needed.
This fix passes the "x" along to the thread:
virtual lldb::addr_t
lldb_private::Thread::GetThreadLocalData(const lldb::ModuleSP module, lldb::addr_t tls_file_addr);
Then this is passed along to the DynamicLoader::GetThreadLocalData():
virtual lldb::addr_t
lldb_private::DynamicLoader::GetThreadLocalData(const lldb::ModuleSP module, const lldb::ThreadSP thread, lldb::addr_t tls_file_addr);
This allows each DynamicLoader plug-in do the right thing for the current OS.
The DynamicLoaderMacOSXDYLD was modified to be able to grab the pthread key from the data structure that is in memory and call "void *pthread_getspecific(pthread_key_t key)" to get the value of the thread local storage and it caches it per thread since it never changes.
I had to update the test case to access the thread local data before trying to print it as on Apple OS variants, thread locals are not available unless they have been accessed at least one by the current thread.
I also added a new lldb::ValueType named "eValueTypeVariableThreadLocal" so that we can ask SBValue objects for their ValueType and be able to tell when we have a thread local variable.
<rdar://problem/23308080>
llvm-svn: 274366
"ClearDIEs()" was being called too soon, before everyone was done using the DIEs.
This fix delays the calls to ::ClearDIEs() until all compile units have been indexed.
1 - Call "::ExtractDIEsIfNeeded()" on all compile units on separate threads. See if each CU has the DIEs parsed and remember this.
2 - Index all compile units on separate threads.
3 - Clear any DIEs in any compile units that didn't have their DIEs parsed after all compile units have been indexed.
Patch by phlav
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20738
llvm-svn: 271209
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
TypeSP SymbolFileDWARF::FindDefinitionTypeForDWARFDeclContext (const DWARFDeclContext &dwarf_decl_ctx);
The problem was we might be looking for a type "Foo", and find one from another langauge. Then the DWARFASTParserClang would try to make an AST type using a CompilerType that might return an empty.
This fix makes sure that when we create a DWARFDeclContext from a DWARFDIE that the DWARFDeclContext we set the language of the DIE. Then when we go to find matches for DWARFDeclContext, we end up with bunch of DIEs. We check each DWARFDIE that we found by asking it for its language and making sure the language is compatible with the type system that we want to use. This keeps us from using the wrong types to resolve forward declarations.
<rdar://problem/25276165>
llvm-svn: 265196
1 - DWARF in .o files with debug map in executable: we would place the compile unit index in the upper 32 bits of the 64 bit value and the lower 32 bits would be the DIE offset
2 - DWO: we would place the compile unit offset in the upper 32 bits of the 64 bit value and the lower 32 bits would be the DIE offset
There was a mixing and matching of this and it wasn't done consistently.
Major changes include:
The DIERef constructor that takes a lldb::user_id_t now requires a SymbolFileDWARF:
DIERef(lldb::user_id_t uid, SymbolFileDWARF *dwarf)
It is needed so that it can be decoded correctly. If it is DWARF in .o files with debug map in executable, then we get the right compile unit from the SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap, otherwise, we use the compile unit offset and DIE offset for DWO or normal DWARF.
The function:
lldb::user_id_t DIERef::GetUID() const;
Now becomes
lldb::user_id_t DIERef::GetUID(SymbolFileDWARF *dwarf) const;
Again, we need the DWARF file to encode it correctly.
This removes the need for "lldb::user_id_t SymbolFileDWARF::MakeUserID() const" and for bool SymbolFileDWARF::UserIDMatches (lldb::user_id_t uid) const". There were also many places were doing things inneficiently like:
1 - encode a dw_offset_t into a lldb::user_id_t
2 - call the public SymbolFile interface to resolve types using the lldb::user_id_t
3 - This would then decode the lldb::user_id_t into a DIERef, and then try to find that type.
There are many places that are now doing this more efficiently by storing DW_AT_type form values as DWARFFormValue objects and then making a DIERef from them and directly calling the underlying function to resolve the lldb_private::Type, lldb_private::CompilerType, lldb_private::CompilerDecl, lldb_private::CompilerDeclContext.
If there are any regressions in DWARF with DWO, we will need to fix any issues that arise since the original patch wasn't functional for the much more widely used DWARF in .o files with debug map.
<rdar://problem/25200976>
llvm-svn: 264909
Summary:
Since r264316, clang started adding DW_AT_GNU_dwo_name attribute to dwo files (previously, this
attribute was only present in main object files), breaking pretty much every dwo test. The
problem was that we were treating the presence of said attribute as a signal that we should look
for information in an external object file, and caused us to enter an infinite loop. I fix this
by making sure we do not go looking for an external dwo file if we already *are* parsing a dwo
file.
Reviewers: tberghammer, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18547
llvm-svn: 264729
This allows these functions to be re-used by a forthcoming
PDBASTParser. The functions in question are CanCompleteType,
CompleteType, and CanImport. Conceptually, these functions belong
on ClangASTImporter anyway, and previously they were just ping
ponging around through a few levels of indirection to end up there
as well, so this patch actually makes the code somewhat simpler.
A few methods were moved to a new file called ClangUtil, so that
they can be shared between ClangASTImporter and ClangASTContext
without creating a circular dependency between those two cpp
files.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18381
llvm-svn: 264685
Additionally fix the type of some dwarf expression where we had a
confusion between scalar and load address types after a dereference.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17604
llvm-svn: 262014
DWARF stores this information in the DW_AT_start_scope attribute. This
CL add support for this attribute and also changes the functions
displaying frame variables to only display the variables currently in
scope.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17449
llvm-svn: 261858
llvm::DenseSet<lldb_private::SymbolFile *> &searched_symbol_files
Each time a SymbolFile::FindTypes() is called, it needs to check the searched_symbol_files list to make sure it hasn't already been asked to find the type and return immediately if it has been checked. This will stop circular dependencies from also crashing LLDB during type queries.
This has proven to be an issue when debugging large applications on MacOSX that use DWARF in .o files.
<rdar://problem/24581488>
llvm-svn: 260434
1) Turns out we weren't correctly uniquing types for C++. We would search our repository for "lldb_private::Process", but yet store just "Process" in the unique type map. Now we store things correctly and correctly unique types.
2) SymbolFileDWARF::CompleteType() can be called at any time in order to complete a C++ or Objective C class. All public inquiries into the SymbolFile go through SymbolVendor, and SymbolVendor correctly takes the module lock before it call the SymbolFile API call, but when we let CompilerType objects out in the wild, they can complete themselves at any time from the expression parser, so the ValueObjects or (SBValue objects in the public API), and many more places. So we now take the module lock when completing a type to avoid two threads being in the SymbolFileDWARF at the same time.
3) If a class has a template member function like:
class A
{
<template T>
void Foo(T t);
};
The DWARF will _only_ contain a DW_TAG_subprogram for "Foo" if anyone specialized it. This would cause a class definition for A inside a.cpp that used a "int" and "float" overload to look like:
class A
{
void Foo(int t);
void Foo(double t);
};
And a version from b.cpp that used a "float" overload to look like:
class A
{
void Foo(float t);
};
And a version from c.cpp that use no overloads to look like:
class A
{
};
Then in an expression if you have two variables, one name "a" from a.cpp in liba.dylib, and one named "b" from b.cpp in libb.dylib, you will get conflicting definitions for "A" and your expression will fail. This all stems from the fact that DWARF _only_ emits template specializations, not generic definitions, and they are only emitted if they are used. There are two solutions to this:
a) When ever you run into ANY class, you must say "just because this class doesn't have templatized member functions, it doesn't mean that any other instances might not have any, so when ever I run into ANY class, I must parse all compile units and parse all instances of class "A" just in case it has member functions that are templatized.". That is really bad because it means you always pull in ALL DWARF that contains most likely exact duplicate definitions of the class "A" and you bloat the memory that the SymbolFileDWARF plug-in uses in LLDB (since you pull in all DIEs from all compile units that contain a "A" definition) uses for little value most of the time.
b) Modify DWARF to emit generic template member function definitions so that you know from looking at any instance of class "A" wether it has template member functions or not. In order to do this, we would have to have the ability to correctly parse a member function template, but there is a compiler bug:
<rdar://problem/24515533> [PR 26553] C++ Debug info should reference DW_TAG_template_type_parameter
This bugs means that not all of the info needed to correctly make a template member function is in the DWARF. The main source of the problem is if we have DWARF for a template instantiation for "int" like: "void A::Foo<int>(T)" the DWARF comes out as "void A::Foo<int>(int)" (it doesn't mention type "T", it resolves the type to the specialized type to "int"). But if you actually have your function defined as "<template T> void Foo(int t)" and you only use T for local variables inside the function call, we can't correctly make the function prototype up in the clang::ASTContext.
So the best we can do for now we just omit all member functions that are templatized from the class definition so that "A" never has any template member functions. This means all defintions of "A" look like:
class A
{
};
And our expressions will work. You won't be able to call template member fucntions in expressions (not a regression, we weren't able to do this before) and if you are stopped in a templatized member function, we won't know that are are in a method of class "A". All things we should fix, but we need <rdar://problem/24515533> fixed first, followed by:
<rdar://problem/24515624> Classes should always include a template subprogram definition, even when no template member functions are used
before we can do anything about it in LLDB.
This bug mainly fixed the following Apple radar:
<rdar://problem/24483905>
llvm-svn: 260308
If your program refers to modules (as indicated in DWARF) we will now try to
load these modules and give you access to their types in expressions. This used
to be gated by a setting ("settings set target.auto-import-clang-modules true")
but that setting defaulted to false. Now it defaults to true -- but you can
disable it by toggling the setting to false.
llvm-svn: 257812
Previously we tried to parse the line table even if a compile unit
had no DW_AT_stmt_list atribute. The problem happens when a compiler
generates debug info for a compile unit but doesn't generate any line
info.
llvm-svn: 257335
Summary:
This change is relevant for inferiors compiled with GCC. GCC does not
emit complete debug info for std::basic_string<...>, and consequently, Clang
(the LLDB compiler) does not generate correct mangled names for certain
functions.
This change removes the hard-coded alternate names in
ItaniumABILanguageRuntime.cpp.
Before the hard-coded names were put in ItaniumABILanguageRuntime.cpp, one could
not evaluate std::string methods (ex. std::string::length). After putting in
the hard-coded names, one could evaluate them. However, it did not still
enable one to call methods on, say for example, std::vector<string>.
This change makes that possible.
There is some amount of incompleteness in this change. Consider the
following example:
std::string hello("hello"), world("world");
std::map<std::string, std::string> m;
m[hello] = world;
One can still not evaluate the expression "m[hello]" in LLDB. Will
address this issue in another pass.
Reviewers: jingham, vharron, evgeny777, spyffe, dawn
Subscribers: clayborg, dawn, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12809
llvm-svn: 257113
This patch adds support for printing global static const variables which are given a DW_AT_const_value DWARF tag by clang.
Fix for bug https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25653
Reviewers: clayborg, tberghammer
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15576
llvm-svn: 255887
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
It was previously reverted due to issues that showed up only on linux. I was able to reproduce these issues and fix the underlying cause.
So this is the same patch as 254476 with the following two fixes:
- Fix not trying to complete classes that don't have external sources
- Fix ClangASTSource::CompleteType() to check the decl context of types that it finds by basename to ensure we don't complete a type "S" with a type like "std::S". Before this fix ClangASTSource::CompleteType() would accept _any_ type that had a matching basename and copy it into the other type.
<rdar://problem/22992457>
llvm-svn: 254980
This is done by finding the types that are forward declarations that come from a module, and loading that module's debug info in a separate lldb_private::Module, and copying the type over into the current module using a ClangASTImporter object. ClangASTImporter objects are already used to copy types from on clang::ASTContext to another for expressions so the type copying code has been around for a while.
A new FindTypes variant was added to SymbolVendor and SymbolFile:
size_t
SymbolVendor::FindTypes (const std::vector<CompilerContext> &context, bool append, TypeMap& types);
size_t
SymbolVendor::FindTypes (const std::vector<CompilerContext> &context, bool append, TypeMap& types);
The CompilerContext is a way to represent the exact context of a type and pass it through an agnostic API boundary so that we can find that exact context elsewhere in another file. This was required here because we can have a module that has submodules, both of which have a "foo" type.
I am not able to add tests for this yet as we currently don't build our C/C++/ObjC binaries with the clang binary that we build. There are some driver issues where it can't find the header files for the C and C++ standard library which makes compiling these tests hard. We can't also guarantee that if we are building with clang that it supporst the exact format of -gmodule debugging that we are trying to test. We have had other versions of clang that had a different implementation of -gmodule debugging that we are no longer supporting, so we can't enable tests if we are building with clang without compiling something and looking at the structure of the DWARF that was generated to ensure that it is the format we can actually use.
llvm-svn: 254476
Summary:
The solution to bug 24074,rL249673 needed
to parse the function information from the Dwarf in order
to set the SymbolContext. For that, GetFunction was called
for the parent in GetTypeForDIE, which parses the
ChildParameters and in the flow, GetTypeForDIE was called
for one of the sibling die and so an infinite
loop was triggered by calling GetFunction repeatedly for the
same function.
The changes in this revision modify the GetTypeForDIE to only
resolve the function context in the Type Lookup flow and so
prevent the infinite loop.
A testcase has also been added to check for regression in the
future and a test vector had been added to the testcase of
24074.
Reviewers: jingham, tberghammer, clayborg
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14202
llvm-svn: 251917
Re-commit the change after fixing a lot of race condition in LLDB
exposed by this change
Loading the debug info from a large application is the slowest task
LLDB do. This CL makes most of the dwarf parsing code multi-threaded.
As a result the speed of "attach; backtrace; exit;" when the inferior
is an LLDB with full debug info increased by a factor of 2.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13662
llvm-svn: 251106
Revert it bacuse it introduces several race condition detected by
the build bots.
This reverts commit 5107a5ebdb7c4571a30a7098b40bf8098b678447.
llvm-svn: 250832
Loading the debug info from a large application is the slowest task
LLDB do. This CL makes most of the dwarf parsing code multi-threaded.
As a result the speed of "attach; backtrace; exit;" when the inferior
is an LLDB with full debug info increased by a factor of 2 (on my machine).
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13662
llvm-svn: 250821
Summary:
In bug 24074, the type information is not shown
correctly. This commit includes the following -
-> Changes for displaying correct type based on
current lexical scope for the command "image
lookup -t"
-> The corresponding testcase.
-> This patch was reverted due to segfaults in
FreeBSD and Mac, I fixed the problems for both now.
Reviewers: emaste, granata.enrico, jingham, clayborg
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13290
llvm-svn: 249673
There are still a bunch of dependencies on the plug-in, but this helps to
identify them.
There are also a few more bits we need to move (and abstract, for example the
ClangPersistentVariables).
llvm-svn: 248612
Summary:
In bug 24074, the type information is not shown
correctly. This commit includes the following -
-> Changes for displaying correct type based on
current lexical scope for the command "image
lookup -t"
-> The corresponding testcase.
Reviewers: jingham, ovyalov, spyffe, richard.mitton, clayborg
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12404
llvm-svn: 248366
Summary:
With the recent changes to separate clang from the core structures
of LLDB, many inclusions of clang headers can be removed.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12954
llvm-svn: 248004
This cleans up type systems to be more pluggable. Prior to this we had issues:
- Module, SymbolFile, and many others has "ClangASTContext &GetClangASTContext()" functions. All have been switched over to use "TypeSystem *GetTypeSystemForLanguage()"
- Cleaned up any places that were using the GetClangASTContext() functions to use TypeSystem
- Cleaned up Module so that it no longer has dedicated type system member variables:
lldb::ClangASTContextUP m_ast; ///< The Clang AST context for this module.
lldb::GoASTContextUP m_go_ast; ///< The Go AST context for this module.
Now we have a type system map:
typedef std::map<lldb::LanguageType, lldb::TypeSystemSP> TypeSystemMap;
TypeSystemMap m_type_system_map; ///< A map of any type systems associated with this module
- Many places in code were using ClangASTContext static functions to place with CompilerType objects and add modifiers (const, volatile, restrict) and to make typedefs, L and R value references and more. These have been made into CompilerType functions that are abstract:
class CompilerType
{
...
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType that is a L value reference to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports L value references,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
GetLValueReferenceType () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType that is a R value reference to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports R value references,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
GetRValueReferenceType () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType adds a const modifier to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports const modifiers,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
AddConstModifier () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType adds a volatile modifier to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports volatile modifiers,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
AddVolatileModifier () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType adds a restrict modifier to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports restrict modifiers,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
AddRestrictModifier () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Create a typedef to this type using "name" as the name of the typedef
// this type is valid and the type system supports typedefs, else return
// an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
CreateTypedef (const char *name, const CompilerDeclContext &decl_ctx) const;
};
Other changes include:
- Removed "CompilerType TypeSystem::GetIntTypeFromBitSize(...)" and CompilerType TypeSystem::GetFloatTypeFromBitSize(...) and replaced it with "CompilerType TypeSystem::GetBuiltinTypeForEncodingAndBitSize(lldb::Encoding encoding, size_t bit_size);"
- Fixed code in Type.h to not request the full type for a type for no good reason, just request the forward type and let the type expand as needed
llvm-svn: 247953
Summary: Supports the parsing of the "using namespace XXX" and "using XXX::XXX" directives. Added ambiguity errors when it two decls with the same name are encountered (see comments in TestCppNsImport). Fixes using directives being duplicated for anonymous namespaces. Fixes GetDeclForUID for specification DIEs.
Reviewers: sivachandra, chaoren, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12897
llvm-svn: 247836
Split-dwarf uses a different header format to specify the address range
for the elements of the location lists.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12880
llvm-svn: 247789
Summary: SymbolFileDWARF now creates VarDecl and BlockDecl and adds them to the Decl tree. Then, in ClangExpressionDeclMap it uses the Decl tree to search for a variable. This fixes lots of variable scoping problems.
Reviewers: sivachandra, chaoren, spyffe, clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, jingham, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12658
llvm-svn: 247746
The iterator pointing to an element of a dense map was used after
the element from was removed from the map what isn't guaranteed to be
valid at that time.
llvm-svn: 247571
* Create new dwo symbol file class
* Add handling for .dwo sections
* Change indexes in SymbolFileDWARF to store compile unit offset next to
DIE offset
* Propagate queries from dwarf compile unit to the dwo compile unit
where applicable
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12291
llvm-svn: 247132
* Remove some unused code
* Remove usage of DWARFDebugInfoEntry::Attributes where usage isn't
reasonable
* Cleanup DWARFMappedHash with separating it to header and implementation
file and fixing the visibility of the functions
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12374
llvm-svn: 247131
class DWARFASTParser
{
public:
virtual ~DWARFASTParser() {}
virtual lldb::TypeSP
ParseTypeFromDWARF (const lldb_private::SymbolContext& sc,
const DWARFDIE &die,
lldb_private::Log *log,
bool *type_is_new_ptr) = 0;
virtual lldb_private::Function *
ParseFunctionFromDWARF (const lldb_private::SymbolContext& sc,
const DWARFDIE &die) = 0;
virtual bool
CompleteTypeFromDWARF (const DWARFDIE &die,
lldb_private::Type *type,
lldb_private::CompilerType &clang_type) = 0;
virtual lldb_private::CompilerDeclContext
GetDeclContextForUIDFromDWARF (const DWARFDIE &die) = 0;
virtual lldb_private::CompilerDeclContext
GetDeclContextContainingUIDFromDWARF (const DWARFDIE &die) = 0;
};
We have one subclass named DWARFASTParserClang that implements all of the clang specific AST type parsing. This keeps all DWARF parsing in the DWARF plug-in. Moved all of the DWARF parsing code that was in ClangASTContext over into DWARFASTParserClang.
lldb_private::TypeSystem classes no longer have any DWARF parsing functions in them, but they can hand out a DWARFASTParser:
virtual DWARFASTParser *
GetDWARFParser ()
{
return nullptr;
}
This keeps things clean and makes for easy merging when we have different AST's for different languages.
llvm-svn: 246242
Added a new class called DWARFDIE that contains a DWARFCompileUnit and DWARFDebugInfoEntry so that these items always stay together.
There were many places where we just handed out DWARFDebugInfoEntry pointers and then use them with a compile unit that may or may not be the correct one. Clients outside of DWARFCompileUnit and DWARFDebugInfoEntry should all be dealing with DWARFDIE instances instead of playing with DWARFCompileUnit/DWARFDebugInfoEntry pairs manually.
This paves to the way for some modifications that are coming for DWO.
llvm-svn: 246100
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
The array is indexed by the value in the DW_FORM filed what can be
bigger then the size of the array. This CL add bound checking to avoid
buffer overflows
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12239
llvm-svn: 245930
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
Another step towards isolating all language/AST specific code into the files to further abstract specific implementations of parsing types for a given language.
llvm-svn: 245090
This is more preparation for multiple different kinds of types from different compilers (clang, Pascal, Go, RenderScript, Swift, etc).
llvm-svn: 244689
This is the work done by Ryan Brown from http://reviews.llvm.org/D8712 that makes a TypeSystem class and abstracts types to be able to use a type system.
All tests pass on MacOSX and passed on linux the last time this was submitted.
llvm-svn: 244679
is optimized into DWARFCompileUnit, where it should have
been. Next I'll need to call this from another section
of code for DWARF-in-.o-file behavior correctness.
llvm-svn: 243736
debugging optimized code. Adds new methods on Function/SBFunction
to query whether a given function is optimized. Adds a new
function.is-optimized format entity and changes the default
frame-format to append "[opt]" if the function was built with
optimization.
The only indication that a binary was built with optimization
that we have right now is the presence of the DW_AT_APPLE_optimized
attribute (DW_FORM_flag value 1) in the DW_TAG_compile_unit.
The absence of this flag may mean that the compile_unit was not
compiled with optimization, or it may mean that the producer
does not generate this attribute.
Currently this only works for dSYM debugging. When we create
the CompileUnit with dwarf-in-.o-file debugging we don't have
the attribute value yet so it's not set. I need to find the
flag value when we do start to read the .o file DWARF and
set the CompileUnit's status at that point - but haven't
done it yet.
I'm also going to add a mechanism for issuing warnings to users
such that they're only issued once in a debug session and
there is away for users to suppress these warnings altogether
via .lldbinit file settings. But I want to get this changeset
committed now that it's at a useful state.
<rdar://problem/19281172>
llvm-svn: 243508
Summary:
The DW_AT_name attribute of compile unit is optional.
If it is missing, try to get filename from the debug_line section.
This allows the compile unit to be useful without the filename.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11003
llvm-svn: 241679
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
Summary:
* Fix enum LanguageType values so that they can be used as indexes
into array language_names and g_languages as assumed by
LanguageRuntime::GetNameForLanguageType,
Language::SetLanguageFromCString and Language::AsCString.
* Add DWARFCompileUnit::LanguageTypeFromDWARF to convert from DWARF
DW_LANG_* values to enum LanguageType values.
Reviewed By: clayborg, abidh
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10484
llvm-svn: 239963
Summary:
`IsRelativeToCurrentWorkingDirectory` was misleading, because relative paths
are sometimes appended to other directories, not just the cwd. Plus, the new
name is shorter. Also added `IsAbsolute` for completeness.
Reviewers: clayborg, ovyalov
Reviewed By: ovyalov
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10262
llvm-svn: 239419
In http://reviews.llvm.org/D9754 I enabled the mangled symbol name lookup
workaround used to find global and anonymous namespace symbols in linux binaries
for all platforms, however we should still only check for these symbols when
processing Linux or FreeBSD binaries where they are relevant. This patch makes
this change.
Test Plan: The tests from the original revision still pass:
TestCallCPPFunction.py
TestCallStopAndContinue.py
TestExprs.py
TestExprsChar.py
TestNamespace.py
TestOverloadedFunctions.py
TestRvalueReferences.py
TestThreadExit.py
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9782
llvm-svn: 237467
all hosts.
We require a workaround to be able to locate global and anonymous namespace
functions in the dwarf symbols on linux binaries. This patch enables this code
on all platforms so that we can still find these symbols when debugging from a
different host platform.
Test Plan:
The following tests begin passing when running with a mac host to linux client:
TestCallCPPFunction.py
TestCallStopAndContinue.py
TestExprs.py
TestExprsChar.py
TestNamespace.py
TestOverloadedFunctions.py
TestRvalueReferences.py
TestThreadExit.py
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9754
llvm-svn: 237270
module-loading support for the expression parser.
- It adds support for auto-loading modules referred
to by a compile unit. These references are
currently in the form of empty translation units.
This functionality is gated by the setting
target.auto-import-clang-modules (boolean) = false
- It improves and corrects support for loading
macros from modules, currently by textually
pasting all #defines into the user's expression.
The improvements center around including only those
modules that are relevant to the current context -
hand-loaded modules and the modules that are imported
from the current compile unit.
- It adds an "opt-in" mechanism for all of this
functionality. Modules have to be explicitly
imported (via @import) or auto-loaded (by enabling
the above setting) to enable any of this
functionality.
It also adds support to the compile unit and symbol
file code to deal with empty translation units that
indicate module imports, and plumbs this through to
the CompileUnit interface.
Finally, it makes the following changes to the test
suite:
- It adds a testcase that verifies that modules are
automatically loaded when the appropriate setting
is enabled (lang/objc/modules-auto-import); and
- It modifies lanb/objc/modules-incomplete to test
the case where a module #undefs something that is
#defined in another module.
<rdar://problem/20299554>
llvm-svn: 235313
Summary:
This is similar to the change introduced for variable DIEs in r233098. If the
linkage names of functions are missing in the DWARF, then their fully qualified
names (similar to the name that would be got by demangling their linkage name)
is generated using the decl context.
This change fixes TestNamespace when the test case is compiled with GCC, hence
it is enabled for GCC. The test and the test case are also enhanced to cover
variadic functions.
Test Plan: dotest.py -C <clang|gcc> -p TestNamespace
Reviewers: clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8623
llvm-svn: 233336