Previously, if the current function had a nonstandard stack layout/ABI, and had a valid
data pointer in the location where the return address is usually located, data corruption
would occur when the breakpoint was written. This could lead to an incorrectly reported
crash or silent corruption of the program's state. Now, if the above check fails, the command safely aborts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71372
TracingStarted gets called in the Thread constructor, which means you can't
call a virtual method of the class. So delay setting up the m_register_values
till you need them. NFC as lldb just crashes if you don't do this.
The thread tracing is an only occasionally useful feature, and it only sort
of works. I'm not adding tests etc. at this point, I'm just poking at it a
bit. If I get it working better I'll write tests and so forth.
Summary:
As discussed on the mailing list [1] we have to make a decision for how to proceed with the modern-type-lookup.
This patch removes modern-type-lookup from LLDB. This just removes all the code behind the modern-type-lookup
setting but it does *not* remove any code from Clang (i.e., the ExternalASTMerger and the clang-import-test stay around
for now).
The motivation for this is that I don't think that the current approach of implementing modern-type-lookup
will work out. Especially creating a completely new lookup system behind some setting that is never turned on by anyone
and then one day make one big switch to the new system seems wrong. It doesn't fit into the way LLVM is developed and has
so far made the transition work much more complicated than it has to be.
A lot of the benefits that were supposed to come with the modern-type-lookup are related to having a better organization
in the way types move across LLDB and having less dependencies on unrelated LLDB code. By just looking at the current code (mostly
the ClangASTImporter) I think we can reach the same goals by just incrementally cleaning up, documenting, refactoring
and actually testing the existing code we have.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2019-December/015831.html
Reviewers: shafik, martong
Subscribers: rnkovacs, christof, arphaman, JDevlieghere, usaxena95, lldb-commits, friss
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71562
If you don't do this you end up running arbitrary code with
only one thread allowed to run, which can cause deadlocks.
<rdar://problem/56422478>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71440
Target doesn't really need to know about ClangASTContext more than any
other TypeSystem. We can create a method ClangASTContext::GetScratch for
anything who needs a ClangASTContext specifically instead of just a
generic TypeSystem.
This is a half-implemented feature that as far as we can tell was
never used by anything since its original inclusion in 2014. This
patch removes it to make remaining the code easier to understand.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71310
Summary:
Yet another step on the long road towards getting rid of lldb's Stream class.
We probably should just make this some kind of member of Address/AddressRange, but it seems quite often we just push
in random integers in there and this is just about getting rid of Stream and not improving arbitrary APIs.
I had to rename another `DumpAddress` function in FormatEntity that is dumping the content of an address to make Clang happy.
Reviewers: labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71052
Summary:
Using a BreakpointList corrupts the breakpoints' IDs because
BreakpointList::Add sets the ID, so use a vector instead, and
update the signature to return the vector wrapped in an
llvm::Expected which can propagate any error from the inner
call to StringIsBreakpointName.
Note that, despite the similar name, SBTarget::FindBreakpointsByName
doesn't suffer the same problem, because it uses a SBBreakpointList,
which is more like a BreakpointIDList than a BreakpointList under the
covers.
Add a check to TestBreakpointNames that, without this fix, notices the
ID getting mutated and fails.
Reviewers: jingham, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70907
Summary:
The FileSpec class is often used as a sort of a pattern -- one specifies
a bare file name to search, and we check if in matches the full file
name of an existing module (for example).
These comparisons used FileSpec::Equal, which had some support for it
(via the full=false argument), but it was not a good fit for this job.
For one, it did a symmetric comparison, which makes sense for a function
called "equal", but not for typical searches (when searching for
"/foo/bar.so", we don't want to find a module whose name is just
"bar.so"). This resulted in patterns like:
if (FileSpec::Equal(pattern, file, pattern.GetDirectory()))
which would request a "full" match only if the pattern really contained
a directory. This worked, but the intended behavior was very unobvious.
On top of that, a lot of the code wanted to handle the case of an
"empty" pattern, and treat it as matching everything. This resulted in
conditions like:
if (pattern && !FileSpec::Equal(pattern, file, pattern.GetDirectory())
which are nearly impossible to decipher.
This patch introduces a FileSpec::Match function, which does exactly
what most of FileSpec::Equal callers want, an asymmetric match between a
"pattern" FileSpec and a an actual FileSpec. Empty paterns match
everything, filename-only patterns match only the filename component.
I've tried to update all callers of FileSpec::Equal to use a simpler
interface. Those that hardcoded full=true have been changed to use
operator==. Those passing full=pattern.GetDirectory() have been changed
to use FileSpec::Match.
There was also a handful of places which hardcoded full=false. I've
changed these to use FileSpec::Match too. This is a slight change in
semantics, but it does not look like that was ever intended, and it was
more likely a result of a misunderstanding of the "proper" way to use
FileSpec::Equal.
[In an ideal world a "FileSpec" and a "FileSpec pattern" would be two
different types, but given how widespread FileSpec is, it is unlikely
we'll get there in one go. This at least provides a good starting point
by centralizing all matching behavior.]
Reviewers: teemperor, JDevlieghere, jdoerfert
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70851
Summary:
Previously the ABI plugin exposed some "register infos" and the
gdb-remote code used those to fill in the missing bits. Now, the
"filling in" code is in the ABI plugin itself, and the gdb-remote code
just invokes that.
The motivation for this is two-fold:
a) the "augmentation" logic is useful outside of process gdb-remote. For
instance, it would allow us to avoid repeating the register number
definitions in minidump code.
b) It gives more implementation freedom to the ABI classes. Now that
these "register infos" are essentially implementation details, classes
can use other methods to obtain dwarf/eh_frame register numbers -- for
instance they can consult llvm MC layer.
Since the augmentation code was not currently tested anywhere, I took
the opportunity to create a simple test for it.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg, tatyana-krasnukha
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70906
Summary:
Adds support for doing range-based for-loops on LLDB's VariableList and
modernises all the index-based for-loops in LLDB where possible.
Reviewers: labath, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70668
Split CallEdge into DirectCallEdge and IndirectCallEdge. Teach
DWARFExpression how to evaluate entry values in cases where the current
activation was created by an indirect call.
rdar://57094085
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70100
Summary: Ensure that breakpoint ivar is properly set in exception breakpoint resolver so that exception breakpoints set on dummy targets are resolved once real targets are created and run.
Reviewers: jingham
Reviewed By: jingham
Subscribers: teemperor, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69880
Summary:
The permissions in a memory region have ternary states (yes, no, don't
know), but the memory region command only prints in binary, treating
"don't know" as "yes", which is particularly confusing as for instance
the unwinder will treat an unknown value as "no".
This patch makes is so that we distinguish all three states when
printing the values, using "?" to indicate the lack of information. It
is implemented via a special argument to the format provider for the
OptionalBool enumeration.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69106
The goal of this refactor is to enable ProcessMinidump to take into
account the loaded modules and their sections when computing the
permissions of various ranges of memory, as discussed in D66638.
This patch moves some of the responsibility for computing the ranges
from MinidumpParser into ProcessMinidump. MinidumpParser still does the
parsing, but ProcessMinidump becomes responsible for answering the
actual queries about memory ranges. This will enable it (in a follow-up
patch) to augment the information obtained from the parser with data
obtained from actual object files.
The changes in the actual code are fairly straight-forward and just
involve moving code around. MinidumpParser::GetMemoryRegions is renamed
to BuildMemoryRegions to emphasize that it does no caching. The only new
thing is the additional bool flag returned from this function. This
indicates whether the returned regions describe all memory mapped into
the target process. Data obtained from /proc/maps and the MemoryInfoList
stream is considered to be exhaustive. Data obtained from Memory(64)List
is not. This will be used to determine whether we need to augment the
data or not.
This reshuffle means that it is no longer possible/easy to test some of
this code via unit tests, as constructing a ProcessMinidump instance is
hard. Instead, I update the unit tests to only test the parsing of the
actual data, and test the answering of queries through a lit test using
the "memory region" command. The patch also includes some tweaks to the
MemoryRegion class to make the unit tests easier to write.
Reviewers: amccarth, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69035
This patch removes the size_t return value and the append parameter
from the remainder of the Find.* functions in LLDB's internal API. As
in the previous patches, this is motivated by the fact that these
parameters aren't really used, and in the case of the append parameter
were frequently implemented incorrectly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69119
llvm-svn: 375160
Summary:
This patch re-types everywhere that passes a File::OpenOptions
as a uint32_t so it actually uses File::OpenOptions.
It also converts some OpenOptions related functions that fail
by returning 0 or NULL into llvm::Expected
split off from https://reviews.llvm.org/D68737
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, jasonmolenda, labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68853
llvm-svn: 374817
Summary:
The SearchCallback has a bool parameter that we always set to false, we never use in any callback implementation and that also changes its name
from one file to the other (either `containing` and `complete`). It was added in the original LLDB check in, so there isn't any history what
this was supposed to be, so let's just remove it.
Reviewers: jingham, JDevlieghere, labath
Reviewed By: jingham, labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68696
llvm-svn: 374313
This will allow us to write reusable scripted ThreadPlans, since
you can use key/value pairs with known keys in the plan to parametrize
its behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68366
llvm-svn: 373675
Summary:
This patch factors out File as an abstract base
class and moves most of its actual functionality into
a subclass called NativeFile. In the next patch,
I'm going to be adding subclasses of File that
don't necessarily have any connection to actual OS files,
so they will not inherit from NativeFile.
This patch was split out as a prerequisite for
https://reviews.llvm.org/D68188
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, jasonmolenda, labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68317
llvm-svn: 373564
It is always doing work on behalf of another thread that presumably
has the mutex, so if it is calling SB API's it should have free access
to the mutex. This is the same decision as we made earlier with the
process RunLock.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68174
llvm-svn: 373280
Summary:
This patch removes File::SetStream() and File::SetDescriptor(),
and replaces most direct uses of File with pointers to File.
Instead of calling SetStream() on a file, we make a new file and
replace it.
My ultimate goal here is to introduce a new API class SBFile, which
has full support for python io.IOStream file objects. These can
redirect read() and write() to python code, so lldb::Files will
need a way to dispatch those methods. Additionally it will need some
form of sharing and assigning files, as a SBFile will be passed in and
assigned to the main IO streams of the debugger.
In my prototype patch queue, I make File itself copyable and add a
secondary class FileOps to manage the sharing and dispatch. In that
case SBFile was a unique_ptr<File>.
(here: https://github.com/smoofra/llvm-project/tree/files)
However in review, Pavel Labath suggested that it be shared_ptr instead.
(here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67793)
In order for SBFile to use shared_ptr<File>, everything else should
as well.
If this patch is accepted, I will make SBFile use a shared_ptr
I will remove FileOps from future patches and use subclasses of File
instead.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, jasonmolenda, zturner, jingham, labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67891
llvm-svn: 373090
Summary:
This patch converts FileSystem::Open from this prototype:
Status
Open(File &File, const FileSpec &file_spec, ...);
to this one:
llvm::Expected<std::unique_ptr<File>>
Open(const FileSpec &file_spec, ...);
This is beneficial on its own, as llvm::Expected is a more modern
and recommended error type than Status. It is also a necessary step
towards https://reviews.llvm.org/D67891, and further developments
for lldb_private::File.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, jasonmolenda, labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67996
llvm-svn: 373003
Summary:
I was recently surprised to learn that there is a total of 2 (two) users
of the register info definitions contained in the ABI plugins. Yet, the
defitions themselves span nearly 10kLOC.
The two users are:
- dwarf expression pretty printer
- the mechanism for augmenting the register info definitions obtained
over gdb-remote protocol (AugmentRegisterInfoViaABI)
Both of these uses need the DWARF an EH register numbers, which is
information that is already available in LLVM. This patch makes it
possible to do so.
It adds a GetMCRegisterInfo method to the ABI class, which every class
is expected to implement. Normally, it should be sufficient to obtain
the definitions from the appropriate llvm::Target object (for which I
provide a utility function), but the subclasses are free to construct it
in any way they deem fit.
We should be able to always get the MCRegisterInfo object from llvm,
with one important exception: if the relevant llvm target was disabled
at compile time. To handle this, I add a mechanism to disable the
compilation of ABI plugins based on the value of LLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD
cmake setting. This ensures all our existing are able to create their
MCRegisterInfo objects.
The new MCRegisterInfo api is not used yet, but the intention is to make
use of it in follow-up patches.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, aprantl, JDevlieghere, tatyana-krasnukha
Subscribers: wuzish, nemanjai, mgorny, kbarton, atanasyan, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67965
llvm-svn: 372862
lvm_private::File::GetStream() can fail if m_options == 0
It's not clear from the header a File created with a descriptor will be
not be usable by many parts of LLDB unless SetOptions is also called,
but it is.
This is because those parts of LLDB rely on GetStream() to use the
file, and that in turn relies on calling fdopen on the descriptor. When
calling fdopen, GetStream relies on m_options to determine the access
mode. If m_options has never been set, GetStream() will fail.
This patch adds options as a required argument to File::SetDescriptor
and the corresponding constructor.
Patch by: Lawrence D'Anna
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67792
llvm-svn: 372652
Summary:
InferiorCall is only ever used in Process, and it is not specific to
POSIX. By moving it to Process, we can remove all dependencies on plugins from
Process. Moving InferiorCall to Process seems to achieve this quite well.
Additionally, the name InferiorCall is a little vague now, so we rename
it something a bit more specific.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, compnerd, labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67472
llvm-svn: 371796
Summary:
We got a radar that printing small floats is not very user-friendly in LLDB as we print them with up to
100 leading zeroes before starting to use scientific notation. This patch changes this by already using
scientific notation when we hit 6 padding zeroes by default and moves this value into a target setting
so that users can just set this number back to 100 if they for some reason preferred the old behaviour.
This new setting is influencing how we format data, so that's why we have to reset the data visualisation
cache when it is changed.
Note that we have always been using scientific notation for large numbers because it seems that
the LLVM implementation doesn't support printing out the padding zeroes for them. I would have fixed
that if it was trivial, but looking at the LLVM implementation for this it seems that this is not as trivial
as it sounds. I would say we look into this if we ever get a bug report about someone wanting to have
a large amount of trailing zeroes in their numbers instead of using scientific notation.
Fixes rdar://39744137
Reviewers: #lldb, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67001
llvm-svn: 370880
There is now std::shared_ptr passed around which is expensive for manycore
CPUs. Most of the times (except for 3 cases) it is now just std::moved with no
CPU locks needed. It also makes it possible to sort the keys (which is now not
needed much after D66398).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67049
llvm-svn: 370863
Remove the single instance of std::call_once() in lldbTarget library
with llvm::call_once(). The former fails to build on NetBSD when
combined with llvm::once_flag (which replaced std::once_flag
in r369618), and combining the two is probably generally incorrect
anyway.
llvm-svn: 370748
Summary:
The DWARFExpression methods have a lot of arguments. This removes two of
them by removing the ability to slice the expression via two offset+size
parameters. This is a functionality that it is not always needed, and
when it is, we already have a different handy way of slicing a data
extractor which we can use instead.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66745
llvm-svn: 370027
This patch is also motivated by the Swift branch and is effectively NFC for the single-TypeSystem llvm.org branch.
In multi-language projects it is extremely common to have, e.g., a
Clang type and a similarly-named rendition of that same type in
another language. When searching for a type It is much cheaper to pass
a set of supported languages to the SymbolFile than having it
materialize every result and then rejecting the materialized types
that have the wrong language.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66546
<rdar://problem/54471165>
This reapplies r369690 with a previously missing constructor for LanguageSet.
llvm-svn: 369710
This patch is also motivated by the Swift branch and is effectively NFC for the single-TypeSystem llvm.org branch.
In multi-language projects it is extremely common to have, e.g., a
Clang type and a similarly-named rendition of that same type in
another language. When searching for a type It is much cheaper to pass
a set of supported languages to the SymbolFile than having it
materialize every result and then rejecting the materialized types
that have the wrong language.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66546
<rdar://problem/54471165>
llvm-svn: 369690
I find as a good cleanup to drop the Compile method. As I do not find TIMTOWTDI
as an advantage and there is already constructor parameter to compile the
regex.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66392
llvm-svn: 369352
Originally I wanted to remove the RegularExpression class in Utility and
replace it with llvm::Regex. However, during that transition I noticed
that there are several places where need the regular expression string.
So instead I propose to keep the RegularExpression class and make it a
thin wrapper around llvm::Regex.
This patch also removes the workaround for empty regular expressions.
The result is that we are now (more or less) POSIX conformant.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66174
llvm-svn: 369153
There was a little bit of logic in the StopInfoBreakpoint::PerformAction
that would null out the StopInfo once we had a completed plan so that the
next call to GetStopInfo would replace it with the StopInfoThreadPlan.
But the stop-hooks check for whether a thread stopped for a reason didn't
trigger this conversion. So I added an API to do that directly, and then
called it where before we just reset the StopInfo.
<rdar://problem/54270767>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66241
llvm-svn: 369052
Now that we've moved to C++14, we no longer need the llvm::make_unique
implementation from STLExtras.h. This patch is a mechanical replacement
of (hopefully) all the llvm::make_unique instances across the monorepo.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66259
llvm-svn: 368933
Currently ExecutionContext::GetByteOrder() always returns the host byte
order. This seems like a simple mistake: the return keyword appears to
have been omitted by accident. This patch fixes that and adds a unit
test.
Bugreport: https://llvm.org/PR37950
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48704
llvm-svn: 368181
Adrian's changes to support Catalyst processes and my
changes to support debugserver running on an arm64_32
device (Apple Watch Series 4, which uses an IPL32 model
on arm64 cpus).
llvm-svn: 368118
This function is not portable, and there are only a handful of usages of
it anyway. Replacing it with std::this_thread::sleep_for enables us to
get rid of the compatibility code in PosixApi.h.
llvm-svn: 367814
Summary:
Update StackFrame::GetSymbolContext to mirror the logic in
RegisterContextLLDB::InitializeNonZerothFrame that knows not to do the
pc decrement when the given frame is a signal trap handler frame or the
parent of one, because the pc may not follow a call in these frames.
Accomplish this by adding a behaves_like_zeroth_frame field to
lldb_private::StackFrame, set to true for the zeroth frame, for
signal handler frames, and for parents of signal handler frames.
Also add logic to propagate the signal handler flag from UnwindPlan to
the FrameType on the RegisterContextLLDB it generates, and factor out a
helper to resolve symbol and address range for an Address now that we
need to invoke it in four places.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg, jfb
Reviewed By: jasonmolenda
Subscribers: labath, dexonsmith, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64993
llvm-svn: 367691
Reformat OptionEnumValueElement to make it easier to distinguish between
its fields. This also removes the need to disable clang-format for these
arrays.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65489
llvm-svn: 367638
Summary:
The methods to find types in a Target aren't clang specific and are
pretty generalizable to type systems. Additionally, to support some of
the use cases in SBTarget, I've added a "GetScratchTypeSystems" method
to Target to support getting all type systems for a target we are
debugging.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64964
llvm-svn: 367480
Summary:
This commit achieves the following:
- Functions used to return a `TypeSystem *` return an
`llvm::Expected<TypeSystem *>` now. This means that the result of a call
is always checked, forcing clients to move more carefully.
- `TypeSystemMap::GetTypeSystemForLanguage` will either return an Error or a
non-null pointer to a TypeSystem.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, davide, compnerd
Subscribers: jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65122
llvm-svn: 367360
Summary:
This is a bit more explicit, and makes it possible to build LLDB without
varying the -I lines per-directory.
(The latter is useful because many build systems only allow this to be
configured per-library, and LLDB is insufficiently layered to be split into
multiple libraries on stricter build systems).
(My comment on D65185 has some more context)
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, labath, chandlerc, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65397
Patch by Sam McCall!
llvm-svn: 367241
Right now our Properties.inc only generates the initializer for the
options list but not the array declaration boilerplate around it. As the
array definition is identical for all arrays, we might as well also let
the Properties.inc generate it alongside the initializers.
Unfortunately we cannot do the same for enums, as there's this magic
ePropertyExperimental, which needs to come at the end to be interpreted
correctly. Hopefully we can get rid of this in the future and do the
same for the property enums.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65353
llvm-svn: 367238
Property definitions are currently defined in a PropertyDefinition array
and have a corresponding enum to index in this array. Unfortunately this
is quite error prone. Indeed, just today we found an incorrect merge
where a discrepancy between the order of the enum values and their
definition caused the test suite to fail spectacularly.
Tablegen can streamline the process of generating the property
definition table while at the same time guaranteeing that the enums stay
in sync. That's exactly what this patch does. It adds a new tablegen
file for the properties, building on top of the infrastructure that
Raphael added recently for the command options. It also introduces two
new tablegen backends: one for the property definitions and one for
their corresponding enums.
It might be worth mentioning that I generated most of the tablegen
definitions from the existing property definitions, by adding a dump
method to the struct. This seems both more efficient and less error
prone that copying everything over by hand. Only Enum properties needed
manual fixup for the EnumValues and DefaultEnumValue fields.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65185
llvm-svn: 367058
This patch replaces explicit calls to log::Printf with the new LLDB_LOGF
macro. The macro is similar to LLDB_LOG but supports printf-style format
strings, instead of formatv-style format strings.
So instead of writing:
if (log)
log->Printf("%s\n", str);
You'd write:
LLDB_LOG(log, "%s\n", str);
This change was done mechanically with the command below. I replaced the
spurious if-checks with vim, since I know how to do multi-line
replacements with it.
find . -type f -name '*.cpp' -exec \
sed -i '' -E 's/log->Printf\(/LLDB_LOGF\(log, /g' "{}" +
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65128
llvm-svn: 366936
This patch removes any remaining instances of LogIfAnyCategoriesSet and
replaces them with the LLDB_LOG macro. This in turn made it possible to
make Log::VAPrintf and Log::VAError private.
llvm-svn: 366768
Instead of taking a status and potentially returning an invalid address,
return an expected which is guaranteed to contain a valid address.
llvm-svn: 366521
The new DriverKit user-land kernel drivers in macOS 10.15 / Catalina
do not have a main() function or an LC_MAIN load command. lldb uses
the address of main() as the return address for inferior function
calls; it puts a breakpoint on main, runs the inferior function call,
and when the main() breakpoint is hit, lldb knows unambiguously that
the inferior function call ran to completion - no other function calls
main.
This change hoists the logic for finding the "entry address" from
ThreadPlanCallFunction to Target. It changes the logic to first
try to get the entry address from the main executable module,
but if that module does not have one, it will iterate through all
modules looking for an entry address.
The patch also adds code to ObjectFileMachO to use dyld's
_dyld_start function as an entry address.
<rdar://problem/52343958>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64897
llvm-svn: 366493
Summary:
Following up to my CPPLanguageRuntime change, I'm moving
ObjCLanguageRuntime into a plugin as well.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, compnerd, jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: mgorny, arphaman, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64763
llvm-svn: 366148
Summary: This seems better suited to be in a plugin.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, jingham, compnerd, labath
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64599
llvm-svn: 365951
Summary:
Instead of hardcoding ClangASTContext and ObjCLanguageRuntime, we can
generalize this by creating the method GetRuntimeType in
LanguageRuntime and moving the current MaybeCalculateCompleteType
implementation into ObjCLanguageruntime::GetRuntimeType
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64159
llvm-svn: 365939
Summary:
IRDynamicChecks in its current form is specific to Clang since it deals
with the C language family. It is possible that we may want to
instrument code generated for other languages, but we can factor in a
more general mechanism to do so at a later time.
This decouples ObCLanguageRuntime from Expression!
Reviewers: compnerd, clayborg, jingham, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64591
llvm-svn: 365853
Change the interface to return an expected, instead of taking a Status
pointer.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64163
llvm-svn: 365226
Summary:
Instead of falling back to ObjCLanguageRuntime, we should be falling
back to every loaded language runtime. This makes ValueObject more
language agnostic.
Reviewers: labath, compnerd, JDevlieghere, davide
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63240
llvm-svn: 364845
on a thread. When talking to some older gdb-remote stubs, We were getting
a stop reason from the stop reply packet and setting it on the relevant
thread before we updated the full stop list. That would get discarded when
the full list was updated.
Also, if you already have a thread list when you go to see if there is an
Operating System plugin, and you do indeed load a new OS plugin, you have to
re-fetch the thread list or it will only show the raw threads.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62887
llvm-svn: 364666
Unfortunately I had to work backwards from a crash log,
so I don't have a good testcase at this point in time.
rdar://problem/51874647
llvm-svn: 364344
Summary:
If target.preload-symbols is false, waiting for the process to "stop"
can take an arbitrarily long amount of time, because it will cause all
the debug info to be parsed (to compute the stop message showing the
function, its arguments, etc).
We were previously waiting for 10 seconds for the stop even to arrive,
which is a pretty long time, but it's not that hard to overcome with
huge debug info.
Since any arbitrary limit can be theoretically overcome with huge
debug_info and/or slow machine, and the stop even was sent 3 lines above
the wait, if we ever do not receive the stop even means we've got a bug
in lldb. Therefore, I remove the timeout on this wait completely.
No test because I don't know how to reproduce this without a
multi-gigabyte symbol file.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63730
llvm-svn: 364276
Summary:
ObjCLanguageRuntime was being pulled into LanguageRuntime because of
Breakpoint Preconditions. If we move BreakpointPrecondition out of Breakpoint,
we can extend the LanguageRuntime plugin interface so that LanguageRuntimes
can give us a BreakpointPrecondition for exceptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63181
llvm-svn: 364098
Summary:
This is the second patch to improve module loading in a series that started here (where I explain the motivation and solution): https://reviews.llvm.org/D62499
I need to read the aux vector to know where the r_debug map with the loaded libraries are.
The AuxVector class was made generic so it could be reused between the POSIX-DYLD plugin and NativeProcess*. The class itself ended up in the ProcessUtility plugin.
Reviewers: clayborg, xiaobai, labath, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: clayborg, labath, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: emaste, JDevlieghere, mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62500
llvm-svn: 363098
Summary:
In an effort to make Process more language agnostic, I removed
GetCPPLanguageRuntime from Process. I'm following up now with an equivalent
change for ObjC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63052
llvm-svn: 362981
Summary:
Using llvm-style rtti gives us stronger guarantees around casting
LanguageRuntimes.
As discussed in D62755
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62934
llvm-svn: 362884
Summary:
I want to remove this method because I think that Process should be
language agnostic, or at least, not have knowledge about specific language
runtimes. There is "GetLanguageRuntime()" which should be used instead. If the
caller a CPPLanguageRuntime, they should cast it as needed. Ideally, this
should only happen in plugins that need C++ specific knowledge.
The next step I would like to do is remove "GetObjCLanguageRuntime()" as well.
There are a lot more instances of that function being used, so I wanted to
upload this one first to get the general reception to this idea.
Reviewers: compnerd, davide, JDevlieghere, jingham, clayborg, labath, aprantl
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62755
llvm-svn: 362544
Summary:
SymbolsDidLoad is currently only implemented for ObjCLanguageRuntime,
but that doesn't mean that it couldn't be useful for other Langauges. Although
this change seems like it's generalizing for the sake of purity, this removes
Target's dependency on ObjCLanguageRuntime.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62796
llvm-svn: 362461
Summary:
When creating a ThreadPlan to step through a trampoline, we ask the
ObjC language runtime and the CPP language runtime to come up with such a thread
plan if the dynamic loader fails to give us one. I don't see why this behavior
can't be language agnostic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61921
llvm-svn: 362164
Summary:
Currently there's not really a good way to iterate over the language runtimes a
process has. This is sometimes desirable (as seen in my change to Thread).
Additionally, there's not really a good reason to iterate over every available
language, but rather only over languages for which we have a plugin loaded.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, davide, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62562
llvm-svn: 361999
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:
From what I understand, it's possible for multiple threads to request
a specific language runtime (e.g. CPPLanguageRuntime). This leads to a data
race.
Reviewers: jingham, JDevlieghere, compnerd, clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62169
llvm-svn: 361442
Summary:
I don't think there's a good reason for this behavior to be considered
ObjC-specific. We can generalize this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61776
llvm-svn: 360741
Currently when we single step over a source line, we run and stop at every branch in the source line range. We can reduce the number of times we stop when stepping over by figuring out if any of these branches are function calls, and if so, ignore these branches. Since we are stepping over we can safely ignore these calls since they will return to the next instruction. Currently the step logic would stop at those branches (1st stop), single step into the branch (2nd stop), and then set a breakpoint at the return address (3rd stop), and then continue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58678
llvm-svn: 360375
This patch ensures that we propagate errors coming from the lldbinit
file trough the command/script interpreter. Before, if you did something
like command script import syntax_error.py, and the python file
contained a syntax error, lldb wouldn't tell you about it. This changes
with the current patch: errors are now propagated by default.
PS: Jim authored this change and I added testing.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61579
llvm-svn: 360216
Checking this in for Antonio Afonso:
This diff changes the function LineEntry::GetSameLineContiguousAddressRange so that it also includes function calls that were inlined at the same line of code.
My motivation is to decrease the step over time of lines that heavly rely on inlined functions. I have multiple examples in the code base I work that makes a step over stop 20 or mote times internally. This can easly had up to step overs that take >500ms which I was able to lower to 25ms with this new strategy.
The reason the current code is not extending the address range beyond an inlined function is because when we resolve the symbol at the next address of the line entry we will get the entry line corresponding to where the original code for the inline function lives, making us barely extend the range. This then will end up on a step over having to stop multiple times everytime there's an inlined function.
To check if the range is an inlined function at that line I also get the block associated with the next address and check if there is a parent block with a call site at the line we're trying to extend.
To check this I created a new function in Block called GetContainingInlinedBlockWithCallSite that does exactly that. I also added a new function to Declaration for convinence of checking file/line named CompareFileAndLine.
To avoid potential issues when extending an address range I added an Extend function that extends the range by the AddressRange given as an argument. This function returns true to indicate sucess when the rage was agumented, false otherwise (e.g.: the ranges are not connected). The reason I do is to make sure that we're not just blindly extending complete_line_range by whatever GetByteSize() we got. If for some reason the ranges are not connected or overlap, or even 0, this could be an issue.
I also added a unit tests for this change and include the instructions on the test itself on how to generate the yaml file I use for testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61292
llvm-svn: 360071
Summary:
According to [C128] "Virtual functions should specify exactly one
of `virtual`, `override`, or `final`", I've added override where a
virtual function is overriden but the explicit `override` keyword
was missing. Whenever both `virtual` and `override` were specified,
I removed `virtual`. As C.128 puts it:
> [...] writing more than one of these three is both redundant and
> a potential source of errors.
I anticipate a discussion about whether or not to add `override` to
destructors but I went for it because of an example in [ISOCPP1000].
Let me repeat the comment for you here:
Consider this code:
```
struct Base {
virtual ~Base(){}
};
struct SubClass : Base {
~SubClass() {
std::cout << "It works!\n";
}
};
int main() {
std::unique_ptr<Base> ptr = std::make_unique<SubClass>();
}
```
If for some odd reason somebody removes the `virtual` keyword from the
`Base` struct, the code will no longer print `It works!`. So adding
`override` to destructors actively protects us from accidentally
breaking our code at runtime.
[C128]: https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#c128-virtual-functions-should-specify-exactly-one-of-virtual-override-or-final
[ISOCPP1000]: https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/issues/1000#issuecomment-476951555
Reviewers: teemperor, JDevlieghere, davide, shafik
Reviewed By: teemperor
Subscribers: kwk, arphaman, kadircet, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61440
llvm-svn: 359868
by respecting the "artificial" attribute on variables. Function
arguments that are artificial and useful to end-users are being
whitelisted by the language runtime.
<rdar://problem/45322477>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61451
llvm-svn: 359841
This is part two of the change started in r359330. This patch moves the
ownership of the script interpreter from the command interpreter into
the debugger. I would've preferred to remove the lazy initialization,
however the fact that the scripting language is set after the debugger
is created makes that tricky. So for now this does exactly the same
thing as when it was under the command interpreter. The result is that
this patch is fully NFC.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61211
llvm-svn: 359354
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
In the process of hoisting the LoadScriptingResourceForModule
out of Target::ModuleAdded and into Target::ModulesDidLoad,
I had ModulesDidLoad fetching the Target's entire image list
and look for scripting resources in those -- instead of only
looking for scripting resources in the modules that had
been added to the target's image list.
<rdar://problem/50065315>
llvm-svn: 358929
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
Add a flag to control whether the ModulesDidLoad notification is
called when a module is added. If the notifications are disabled,
the caller must call ModulesDidLoad after adding all the new modules,
but postponing this notification until they're all batched up can
allow for better efficiency than notifying one-by-one.
Change the name of the ModuleList notifier functions that a subclass
can implement to start with 'Notify' to make it clear what they are.
Add a NotifyModulesRemoved.
Add header documentation for the changed/updated methods.
Added defaulted-value 'notify' argument to ModuleList Append,
AppendIfNeeded, and Remove because callers working with a local
ModuleList don't have an obvious idea of what notify means in this
context. When the ModuleList is a part of the Target class, the
notify behavior matters.
DynamicLoaderDarwin has been updated so that libraries being
added/removed are correctly batched up before notifications are
sent. Added the TestModuleLoadedNotifys.py test to run on
Darwin to test this.
<rdar://problem/48293064>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60172
llvm-svn: 357955
Since these timeouts guard against catastrophic error in debugserver,
I also increased all of them to the maximum value among them.
The motivation for this test was the observation that an asanified
LLDB would often exhibit seemingly random test failures that could be
traced back to debugserver packets getting out of sync. With this path
applied I can no longer reproduce the one particular failure mode that
I was investigating.
rdar://problem/49441261
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60340
llvm-svn: 357829
I found the code of Process::WriteMemory particularly hard to follow
when reviewing Ismail's change in D60022. This simplifies the code and
hopefully prevents similar oversights in the future.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60092
llvm-svn: 357428
Summary:
In case of a breakpoint site overlapping with the destination address,
the WriteMemory method reported an incorrect memory size.
Instead of returning the right amount of bytes written, it falls through
the scope and returned 0.
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, friss, jingham
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, davide, lldb-commits, #lldb
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60022
llvm-svn: 357420
For = operators for lists that have mutexes, we were either
just taking the locks sequentially or hand-rolling a trick
to try to avoid lock inversion. Use the std::lock mechanism
for this instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59957
llvm-svn: 357276
For a single char argument, find_first_of is equal to find and
find_last_of is equal to rfind. While playing around with the plugin
stuff this caused an export failure because it always got inlined except
once, which resulted in an undefined symbol.
llvm-svn: 357198
Summary:
This patch is the MVP version of importing the std module into the expression parser to improve C++ debugging.
What happens in this patch is that we inject a `@import std` into our expression source code. We also
modify our internal Clang instance for parsing this expression to work with modules and debug info
at the same time (which is the main change in terms of LOC). We implicitly build the `std` module on the first use. The
C++ include paths for building are extracted from the debug info, which means that this currently only
works if the program is compiled with `-glldb -fmodules` and uses the std module. The C include paths
are currently specified by LLDB.
I enabled the tests currently only for libc++ and Linux because I could test this locally. I'll enable the tests
for other platforms once this has landed and doesn't break any bots (and I implemented the platform-specific
C include paths for them).
With this patch we can now:
* Build a libc++ as a module and import it into the expression parser.
* Read from the module while also referencing declarations from the debug info. E.g. `std::abs(local_variable)`.
What doesn't work (yet):
* Merging debug info and C++ module declarations. E.g. `std::vector<CustomClass>` doesn't work.
* Pretty much anything that involves the ASTImporter and templated code. As the ASTImporter is used for saving the result declaration, this means that we can't
call yet any function that returns a non-trivial type.
* Use libstdc++ for this, as it requires multiple include paths and Clang only emits one include path per module. Also libstdc++ doesn't support Clang modules without patches.
Reviewers: aprantl, jingham, shafik, friss, davide, serge-sans-paille
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: labath, mgorny, abidh, jdoerfert, lldb-commits
Tags: #c_modules_in_lldb, #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58125
llvm-svn: 355939
There was a crash that would happen if an IDE would ask for a child of a shared pointer via any SB API call that ends up calling StackFrame::GetValueForVariableExpressionPath(). The previous code expects an error to be set describing why the synthetic child of a type was not able to be found, but we have some synthetic child providers that weren't setting the error and returning an empty value object shared pointer. This fixes that to ensure we don't lose our debug session by crashing, fully tests GetValueForVariableExpressionPath functionality, and ensures we don't crash on GetValueForVariableExpressionPath() in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59200
llvm-svn: 355850
to do "databuffer + offset" so that we don't overflow the uint64_t's
we're using for addresses when working with high addresses.
Found with clang's ubsan while doing darwin kernel debugging.
<rdar://problem/48728940>
llvm-svn: 355761
Previously if an invalid program was specified, there was a bug
which, when we attempted to launch the program, would report that
the operation succeeded, causing LLDB to then hang while waiting
indefinitely to receive some events from the process.
After this patch, when an invalid program is specified, we immediately
return to vs code with an error message that indicates that the
program can not be found.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59114
llvm-svn: 355656
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
Summary:
This file implements some general purpose data structures, and so it
belongs to the Utility module.
Reviewers: zturner, jingham, JDevlieghere, clayborg, espindola
Subscribers: emaste, mgorny, javed.absar, arichardson, MaskRay, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58970
llvm-svn: 355509
There are set of classes in Target that describe the parameters of a
process - e.g. it's PID, name, user id, and similar. However, since it
is a bare description of a process and contains no actual functionality,
there's nothing specifically that makes this appropriate for being in
Target -- it could just as well be describing a process on the host, or
some hypothetical virtual process that doesn't even exist.
To cement this, I'm moving these classes to Utility. It's possible that
we can find a better place for it in the future, but as it is neither
Host specific nor Target specific, Utility seems like the most appropriate
place for the time being.
After this there is only 2 remaining references to Target from Host,
which I'll address in a followup.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58842
llvm-svn: 355342
Summary:
This creates an abstract base class called "UserIDResolver", which can
be implemented to provide user/group ID resolution capabilities for
various objects. Posix host implement a PosixUserIDResolver, which does
that using posix apis (getpwuid and friends). PlatformGDBRemote
forwards queries over the gdb-remote link, etc. ProcessInstanceInfo
class is refactored to make use of this interface instead of taking a
platform pointer as an argument. The base resolver class already
implements caching and thread-safety, so implementations don't have to
worry about that.
The main motivating factor for this was to remove external dependencies
from the ProcessInstanceInfo class (so it can be put next to
ProcessLaunchInfo and friends), but it has other benefits too:
- ability to test the user name caching code
- ability to test ProcessInstanceInfo dumping code
- consistent interface for user/group resolution between Platform and
Host classes.
Reviewers: zturner, clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58167
llvm-svn: 355323
When the debugger is run in sync mode, you need to
be able to tell whether a hijacked resume is for some
special purpose (like waiting for the SIGSTOP on attach)
or just to perform a synchronous resume. Target::Launch was doing
that wrong, and that caused stop-hooks on process launch
in source files to behave incorrectly.
<rdar://problem/48115661>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58727
llvm-svn: 355213
They aren't designed to nest recursively, so this will prevent that.
Also add a --auto-continue flag, putting "continue" in the stop hook makes
the stop hooks fight one another in multi-threaded programs.
Also allow more than one -o options so you can make more complex stop hooks w/o
having to go into the editor.
<rdar://problem/48115661>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58394
llvm-svn: 354706
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
Summary:
Implement a few routines for Windows to support some basic process interaction and file system operations.
Reviewers: zturner, llvm-commits, labath, jingham
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: emaste, jdoerfert, Hui, labath, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56232
llvm-svn: 354010
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
Summary:
The two classes contained a lot of duplicated code, but there wasn't a
good place to factor it to. It couldn't be the base Platform class,
since we also have platforms which are only remote (such as
PlatformGDBRemoteServer), and so it did not make sense for those to have
an m_remote_platform member.
This patch creates a new class, RemoteAwarePlatform, which can serve as
a base class for platforms which can both serve as a host, and forward
actions to a remote system. It is motivated partly by D56232 (which was
about to add a bunch of additional duplicated methods), and partly by my
own need to modify a function which happens to be implemented in both
places identically.
The patch moves the methods which are trivially identical in the two
classes into the common base class, there were one or two more methods
which could probably be merged into one, but this wasn't completely
trivial, so I did not attempt to do that now.
Reviewers: jingham, zturner, clayborg, asmith
Subscribers: emaste, mgorny, Hui, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58052
llvm-svn: 353812
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
An equivalent change was made to RemapPaths, but it needed to be made
here as well. Also added a test for this and made the setup a little
more complex to avoid false successes.
<rdar://problem/47642498>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57552
llvm-svn: 353243
Summary:
This patch adds support of expression evaluation in a context of some object.
Consider the following example:
```
struct S {
int a = 11;
int b = 12;
};
int main() {
S s;
int a = 1;
int b = 2;
// We have stopped here
return 0;
}
```
This patch allows to do something like that:
```
lldb.frame.FindVariable("s").EvaluateExpression("a + b")
```
and the result will be `33` (not `3`) because fields `a` and `b` of `s` will be
used (not locals `a` and `b`).
This is achieved by replacing of `this` type and object for the expression. This
has some limitations: an expression can be evaluated only for values located in
the debuggee process memory (they must have an address of `eAddressTypeLoad`
type).
Reviewers: teemperor, clayborg, jingham, zturner, labath, davide, spyffe, serge-sans-paille
Reviewed By: jingham
Subscribers: abidh, lldb-commits, leonid.mashinskiy
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55318
llvm-svn: 353149
Summary:
These classes describe the details of the process we are about to
launch, and so they are naturally used by the launching code in the Host
module. Previously they were present in Target because that is the most
important (but by far not the only) user of the launching code.
Since the launching code has other customers, must of which do not care
about Targets, it makes sense to move these classes to the Host layer,
next to the launching code.
This move reduces the number of times that Target is included from host
to 8 (it used to be 14).
Reviewers: zturner, clayborg, jingham, davide, teemperor
Subscribers: emaste, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56602
llvm-svn: 353047
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
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
LLVM added wrappers to std::sort (r327219) that randomly shuffle the
container before sorting. The goal is to uncover non-determinism due to
undefined sorting order of objects having the same key.
This can be enabled with -DLLVM_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS=ON.
llvm-svn: 350679
Summary:
The target was being used in FinalizeFileActions to provide default
values for stdin/out/err. Also, most of the logic of this function was
very specific to how the lldb's Target class wants to launch processes,
so I, move it to Target::FinalizeFileActions, inverting the dependency.
The only piece of logic that was useful elsewhere (lldb-server) was the
part which sets up a pty and relevant file actions. I've kept this part
as ProcessLaunchInfo::SetUpPtyRedirection.
This makes ProcessLaunchInfo independent of any high-level lldb constructs.
Reviewers: zturner, jingham, teemperor
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56196
llvm-svn: 350617
Summary:
The Debuffer object was being used in "GetListenerForProcess" to provide
a default listener object if one was not specified in the launch_info
object.
Since all the callers of this function immediately passed the result to
Target::CreateProcess, it was easy to move this logic there instead.
This brings us one step closer towards being able to move the LaunchInfo
classes to the Host layer (which is there the launching code that
consumes them lives).
Reviewers: zturner, jingham, teemperor
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56174
llvm-svn: 350510
There is already in use:
lit/lit-lldb-init:
settings set symbols.enable-external-lookup false
packages/Python/lldbsuite/test/lldbtest.py:
self.runCmd('settings set symbols.enable-external-lookup false')
But those are not in effect during MI part of the testsuite. Another problem is
that symbols.enable-external-lookup (read by GetEnableExternalLookup) has been
currently read only by LocateMacOSXFilesUsingDebugSymbols and therefore it had
no effect on Linux.
On Red Hat platforms (Fedoras, RHEL-7) there is DWZ in use and so
MiSyntaxTestCase-test_lldbmi_output_grammar FAILs due to:
AssertionError: error: inconsistent pattern ''^.+?\n'' for state 0x5f
(matched string: warning: (x86_64) /lib64/libstdc++.so.6 unsupported
DW_FORM values: 0x1f20 0x1f21
It is the only testcase with this error. It happens due to:
(lldb) target create "/lib64/libstdc++.so.6"
Current executable set to '/lib64/libstdc++.so.6' (x86_64).
(lldb) b main
warning: (x86_64) /lib64/libstdc++.so.6 unsupported DW_FORM values: 0x1f20 0x1f21
Breakpoint 1: no locations (pending).
WARNING: Unable to resolve breakpoint to any actual locations.
which happens only with gcc-base-debuginfo rpm installed (similarly for other packages).
It should also speed up the testsuite as it no longer needs to read
/usr/lib/debug symbols which have no effect (and should not have any effect) on
the testsuite results.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55859
llvm-svn: 350368
This builds on https://reviews.llvm.org/D43884 and https://reviews.llvm.org/D43886 and extends LLDB support of Obj-C exceptions to also look for a "current exception" for a thread in the C++ exception handling runtime metadata (via call to __cxa_current_exception_type). We also construct an actual historical SBThread/ThreadSP that contains frames from the backtrace in the Obj-C exception object.
The high level goal this achieves is that when we're already crashed (because an unhandled exception occurred), we can still access the exception object and retrieve the backtrace from the throw point. In Obj-C, this is particularly useful because a catch+rethrow is very common and in those cases you currently don't have any access to the throw point backtrace.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44072
llvm-svn: 349718
We need to ensure that Finalize gets called before we start
to destroy the old Process or the weak_ptr->shared_ptr link
from Threads to Target gets broken before the threads are
destroyed.
<rdar://problem/43586979>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55631
llvm-svn: 349435
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
Summary:
These are general purpose "utility" classes, whose functionality is not
debugger-specific in any way. As such, I believe they belong in the
Utility module.
This doesn't break any particular dependency (yet), but it reduces the
number of Core dependencies across the board.
Reviewers: zturner, jingham, teemperor, clayborg
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55361
llvm-svn: 349157
Summary: Instead use a more reasonable value to start and rely on the fact that SmallString will resize if necessary.
Reviewers: labath, asmith
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55457
llvm-svn: 348775
in one packet from 1k bytes to 16k bytes. Sending a large file to an
iOS device directly connected by USB cable, to lldb-server running in
platform mode, this speeds up the file xfer by 77%. Sending the file
in 32k blocks speeds up the file xfer by 80% versus 1k blocks, starting
with 16k to make sure we don't have any problems with android testing.
We may not have the same perf characteristics over ethernet, but with
USB it's faster to send fewer larger packets than many small packets.
llvm-svn: 348557
Summary:
This patch fixes the next situation. On Windows clang-cl makes no stub before
the main function, so the main function is located exactly on module entry
point. May be it is the same on other platforms. So consider the following
sequence:
- set a breakpoint on main and stop there;
- try to evaluate expression, which requires a code execution on the debuggee
side. Such an execution always returns to the module entry, and the plan waits
for it there;
- the plan understands that it is complete now and removes its breakpoint. But
the breakpoint site is still there, because we also have a breakpoint on
entry;
- StopInfo analyzes a situation. It sees that we have stopped on the breakpoint
site, and it sees that the breakpoint site has owners, and no one logical
breakpoint is internal (because the plan is already completed and it have
removed its breakpoint);
- StopInfo thinks that it's a user breakpoint and skips it to avoid recursive
computations;
- the program continues.
So in this situation the program continues without a stop right after
the expression evaluation. To avoid this an additional check that
the plan was completed was added.
Reviewers: jingham, zturner, boris.ulasevich
Reviewed by: jingham
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53761
llvm-svn: 347974
This adds new APIs and a command to deal with exceptions (mostly Obj-C exceptions): SBThread and Thread get GetCurrentException API, which returns an SBValue/ValueObjectSP with the current exception for a thread. "Current" means an exception that is currently being thrown, caught or otherwise processed. In this patch, we only know about the exception when in objc_exception_throw, but subsequent patches will expand this (and add GetCurrentExceptionBacktrace, which will return an SBThread/ThreadSP containing a historical thread backtrace retrieved from the exception object. Currently unimplemented, subsequent patches will implement this).
Extracting the exception from objc_exception_throw is implemented by adding a frame recognizer.
This also add a new sub-command "thread exception", which prints the current exception.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43886
llvm-svn: 347813
When debugging read-only memory we cannot use software breakpoint. We
already have support for hardware breakpoints and users can specify them
with `-H`. However, there's no option to force LLDB to use hardware
breakpoints internally, for example while stepping.
This patch adds a setting target.require-hardware-breakpoint that forces
LLDB to always use hardware breakpoints. Because hardware breakpoints
are a limited resource and can fail to resolve, this patch also extends
error handling in thread plans, where breakpoints are used for stepping.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54221
llvm-svn: 346920
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
qWatchpointSupportInfo packet correctly.
In GDBRemoteCommunicationClient::GetWatchpointSupportInfo,
if the response to qWatchpointSupportInfo does not
include the 'num' field, then we did not get an answer
we understood, mark this target as not supporting that
packet.
In Target.cpp, rename the very confusingly named
CheckIfWatchpointsExhausted to CheckIfWatchpointsSupported,
and check the error status returned by
Process::GetWatchpointSupportInfo. If we cannot determine
what the number of supported watchpoints are, assume that
they will work. We'll handle the failure
later when we try to create/enable the watchpoint if the
Z2 packet isn't supported.
Add a gdb_remote_client test case.
<rdar://problem/42621432>
llvm-svn: 346561
The whole point of this change was making it possible to resolve paths
without depending on the FileSystem, which is not what I did here. Not
sure what I was thinking...
llvm-svn: 346466
In order to call real_path from the TildeExpressionResolver we need
access to the FileSystem. Since the resolver lives under utility we have
to pass in the FS.
llvm-svn: 346457
Replace calls to LLVM's is_directory with calls to LLDB's FileSytem
class. For this I introduced a new convenience method that, like the
other methods, takes either a path or filespec. This still uses the LLVM
functions under the hood.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54135
llvm-svn: 346375
This patch modifies how we open File instances in LLDB. Rather than
passing a path or FileSpec to the constructor, we now go through the
virtual file system. This is needed in order to make things work with
the VFS in the future.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54020
llvm-svn: 346049
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 ResolveExecutableLocation method from FileSpec
and updates its uses with calls to the FileSystem.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53834
llvm-svn: 345853
This patch removes the GetPermissions and GetReadable methods from
FileSpec and updates its uses with calls to the FileSystem.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53831
llvm-svn: 345843
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 moves the EnumerateDirectory functionality and related enum
and typedef from FileSpec to FileSystem.
This is part of a set of patches that extracts file system related
convenience methods from FileSpec. The long term goal is to remove this
method altogether and use the iterators directly, but for introducing
the VFS into LLDB this change is sufficient.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53785
llvm-svn: 345800
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 patch introduces a concept of "frame recognizer" and "recognized frame". This should be an extensible mechanism that retrieves information about special frames based on ABI, arguments or other special properties of that frame, even without source code. A few examples where that could be useful could be 1) objc_exception_throw, where we'd like to get the current exception, 2) terminate_with_reason and extracting the current terminate string, 3) recognizing Objective-C frames and automatically extracting the receiver+selector, or perhaps all arguments (based on selector).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44603
llvm-svn: 345693
This patch introduces a concept of "frame recognizer" and "recognized frame". This should be an extensible mechanism that retrieves information about special frames based on ABI, arguments or other special properties of that frame, even without source code. A few examples where that could be useful could be 1) objc_exception_throw, where we'd like to get the current exception, 2) terminate_with_reason and extracting the current terminate string, 3) recognizing Objective-C frames and automatically extracting the receiver+selector, or perhaps all arguments (based on selector).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44603
llvm-svn: 345686
This patch introduces a concept of "frame recognizer" and "recognized frame". This should be an extensible mechanism that retrieves information about special frames based on ABI, arguments or other special properties of that frame, even without source code. A few examples where that could be useful could be 1) objc_exception_throw, where we'd like to get the current exception, 2) terminate_with_reason and extracting the current terminate string, 3) recognizing Objective-C frames and automatically extracting the receiver+selector, or perhaps all arguments (based on selector).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44603
llvm-svn: 345678
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
Add support in ProcessGDBRemote::GetGDBServerRegisterInfo
for recognizing a generic "arm" architecture that will be used if
nothing better is available so that we don't ignore the register
definitions if we didn't already have an architecture set.
Also in ProcessGDBRemote::DoConnectRemote don't set the target
arch unless we have a valid architecture to set it to.
Platform::ConnectProcess will try to get the current target's
architecture, or the default architecture, when creating the
target for the connection to be attempted. If lldb was started
with a target binary, we want to create this target with that
architecture in case the remote gdb stub doesn't supply a
qHostInfo arch.
Add logging to Target::MergeArchitecture.
<rdar://problem/34916465>
llvm-svn: 345106
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
max number of stack frames to backtrace, make it a setting,
target.process.thread.max-backtrace-depth.
Add a test case for the setting.
<rdar://problem/28759559>
llvm-svn: 343029
This is an NFC commit to refactor the "load dependent files" parameter
from a boolean to an enum value. We want to be able to specify a
default, in which case we decide whether or not to load the dependent
files based on whether the target is an executable or not (i.e. a
dylib).
This is a dependency for D51934.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51859
llvm-svn: 342633
This change allows you to write a new breakpoint type where the
logic for setting breakpoints is determined by a Python callback
written using the SB API's.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51830
llvm-svn: 342185
In a subsequent commit, I will need to expose the search depth
to the SB API's, so I'm moving this define into lldb-enumerations
where it will get added to the lldb module.
llvm-svn: 341690
This patch extends the SBAPI to allow for setting a breakpoint not
only at a specific line, but also at a specific (minimum) column. When
a column is specified, it will try to find an exact match or the
closest match on the same line that comes after the specified
location.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51461
llvm-svn: 341078
Summary:
D48465 is currently blocked by the fact that tab-completing the first expression is deadlocking LLDB.
The reason for this deadlock is that when we push the ProcessIO handler for reading the Objective-C runtime
information from the executable (which is triggered when we parse the an expression for the first time),
the IOHandler can't be pushed as the Editline::Cancel method is deadlocking.
The deadlock in Editline is coming from the m_output_mutex, which is locked before we go into tab completion.
Even without this lock, calling Cancel on Editline will mean that Editline cleans up behind itself and deletes the
current user-input, which is screws up the console when we are tab-completing at the same time.
I think for now the most reasonable way of fixing this is to just not call Cancel on the current IOHandler when we push
the IOHandler for running an internal utility function.
As we can't really write unit tests for IOHandler itself (due to the hard dependency on an initialized Debugger including
all its global state) and Editline completion is currently also not really testable in an automatic fashion, the test for this has
to be that the expression command completion in D48465 doesn't fail when requesting completion the first time.
A more precise test plan for this is:
1. Apply D48465.
2. Start lldb and break in some function.
3. Type `expr foo` and press tab to request completion.
4. Without this patch, we deadlock and LLDB stops responding.
I'll provide an actual unit test for this once I got around and made the IOHandler code testable,
but for now unblocking D48465 is more critical.
Thanks to Jim for helping me debugging this.
Reviewers: jingham
Reviewed By: jingham
Subscribers: emaste, clayborg, abidh, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50912
llvm-svn: 340988
This change improves the logging for the lldb.module category to note a few interesting cases:
1. Local object file found, but specs not matching
2. Local object file not found, using a placeholder module
The handling and logging for the cases wehre we fail to load compressed dwarf
symbols is also improved.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50274
llvm-svn: 339161
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
In this patch I add support for ARM and ARM64 break pad files. There are two flavors of ARM: Apple where FP is R7, and non Apple where FP is R11. Added minimal tests that load up ARM64 and the two flavors or ARM core files with a single thread and known register values in each register. Each register is checked for the exact value.
This is a fixed version of: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49750
The changes from D49750 are:
Don't init the m_arch in the Initialize call as a system info isn't required. This keeps the thread list, module list and other tests from failing
Added -Wextended-offsetof to Xcode project so we catch use extended usages of offsetof before submission
Fixed any extended offset of warnings
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50336
llvm-svn: 339032
This reverts commit r338734 (and subsequent fixups in r338772 and
r338746), because it breaks some minidump unit tests and introduces a
lot of compiler warnings.
llvm-svn: 338828
In this patch I add support for ARM and ARM64 break pad files. There are two flavors of ARM: Apple where FP is R7, and non Apple where FP is R11. Added minimal tests that load up ARM64 and the two flavors or ARM core files with a single thread and known register values in each register. Each register is checked for the exact value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49750
llvm-svn: 338734
Summary:
This patch adds syntax highlighting support to LLDB. When enabled (and lldb is allowed
to use colors), printed source code is annotated with the ANSI color escape sequences.
So far we have only one highlighter which is based on Clang and is responsible for all
languages that are supported by Clang. It essentially just runs the raw lexer over the input
and then surrounds the specific tokens with the configured escape sequences.
Reviewers: zturner, davide
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: labath, teemperor, llvm-commits, mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49334
llvm-svn: 338662
Clarify how StackFrameList works by documenting its methods. Also,
delete some dead code and insert some TODOs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50087
llvm-svn: 338590
Splitting GetOnlyConcreteFramesUpTo will make it easier to implement
support for synthetic tail call frames in backtraces. This is just a
prep change, no functionality is affected.
llvm-svn: 338588
Summary:
The dump function was the only part of this class which depended on
high-level functionality. This was due to the DumpDataExtractor
function, which uses info from a running target to control dump format
(although, RegisterValue doesn't really use the high-level part of
DumpDataExtractor).
This patch follows the same approach done for the DataExtractor class,
and extracts the dumping code into a separate function/file. This file
can stay in the higher level code, while the RegisterValue class and
anything that does not depend in dumping can stay go to lower layers.
The XCode project will need to be updated after this patch.
Reviewers: zturner, jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48351
llvm-svn: 337832
This provides an efficient (at least on Posix platforms) way to offload to the
target process the search & loading of a library when all we have are the
library name and a set of potential candidate locations.
<rdar://problem/40905971>
llvm-svn: 335912
If we have a function with signature f(addr_t, AddressClass), it is easy to muddle up the order of arguments without any warnings from compiler. 'enum class' prevents passing integer in place of AddressClass and vice versa.
llvm-svn: 335599
Summary:
This has multiple advantages:
- we need only one function argument/instance variable instead of three
- no need to default initialize variables
- no custom parsing code
- VersionTuple has comparison operators, which makes version comparisons much
simpler
Reviewers: zturner, friss, clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47889
llvm-svn: 334950
SetFile has an optional style argument which defaulted to the native
style. This patch makes that argument mandatory so clients of the
FileSpec class are forced to think about the correct syntax.
At the same time this introduces a (protected) convenience method to
update the file from within the FileSpec class that keeps the current
style.
These two changes together prevent a potential pitfall where the style
might be forgotten, leading to the path being updated and the style
unintentionally being changed to the host style.
llvm-svn: 334663
Summary:
Occasionally, when launching a process in lldb (especially on windows, but not limited to), lldb will hang before the process is launched and it will never recover. This happens because the timing of the processing of the state changes can be slightly different. The state changes that are issued are:
1) SetPublicState(eStateLaunching)
2) SetPrivateState(eStateLaunching)
3) SetPublicState(eStateStopped)
4) SetPrivateState(eStateStopped)
What we expect to see is:
public state: launching -> launching -> stopped
private state: launching -> stopped
What we see is:
public state: launching -> stopped -> launching
private state: launching -> stopped
The second launching change to the public state is issued when WaitForProcessStopPrivate calls HandlePrivateEvent on the event which was created when the private state was set to launching. HandlePrivateEvent has logic to determine whether to broadcase the event and a launching event is *always* broadcast. At the same time, when the stopped event is processed by WaitForProcessStopPrivate next, the function exists and that event is never broadcast, so the public state remains as launching.
HandlePrivateEvent does two things: determine whether there's a next action as well as determine whether to broadcast the event that was processed. There's only ever a next action set if we are trying to attach to a process, but WaitForProcessStopPrivate is only ever called when we are launching a process or connecting remotely, so the first part of HandlePrivateEvent (handling the next action) is irrelevant for WaitForProcessStopPrivate. As far as broadcasting the event is concerned, since we are handling state changes that already occurred to the public state (and are now duplicated in the private state), I believe the broadcast step is unnecessary also (and in fact, it causes the hang).
This change removes the call to HandlePrivateEvent from inside WaitForProcessStopPrivate.
Incidentally, there was also a bug filed recently that is the same issue: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37496
Reviewers: asmith, labath, zturner, jingham
Reviewed By: zturner, jingham
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47609
llvm-svn: 333781
This teaches lldb-test how to launch a process, set up an IRMemoryMap,
and issue memory allocations in the target process through the map. This
makes it possible to test IRMemoryMap in a targeted way.
This has uncovered two bugs so far. The first bug is that Malloc
performs an adjustment on the pointer returned from AllocateMemory (for
alignment purposes) which ultimately allows overlapping memory regions
to be created. The second bug is that after most of the address space on
the host side is exhausted, Malloc may return the same address multiple
times. These bugs (and hopefully more!) can be uncovered and tested for
with targeted lldb-test commands.
At an even higher level, the motivation for addressing these bugs is
that they can lead to strange user-visible failures (e.g, variables
assume the wrong value during expression evaluation, or the debugger
crashes). See my third comment on this swift-lldb PR for an example:
https://github.com/apple/swift-lldb/pull/652
I hope lldb-test is the right place to add this testing harness. Setting
up a gtest-style unit test proved too cumbersome (you need to recreate
or mock way too much debugger state), as did writing end-to-end tests
(it's hard to write a test that actually hits a buggy path).
With lldb-test, it's easy to read/generate the test input and parse the
test output. I'll attach a simple "fuzz" tester which generates failing
test cases to the Phab review. Here's an example:
```
Command: malloc(size=1024, alignment=32)
Malloc: address = 0xca000
Command: malloc(size=64, alignment=16)
Malloc: address = 0xca400
Command: malloc(size=1024, alignment=16)
Malloc: address = 0xca440
Command: malloc(size=16, alignment=8)
Malloc: address = 0xca840
Command: malloc(size=2048, alignment=16)
Malloc: address = 0xcb000
Command: malloc(size=64, alignment=32)
Malloc: address = 0xca860
Command: malloc(size=1024, alignment=16)
Malloc: address = 0xca890
Malloc error: overlapping allocation detected, previous allocation at [0xca860, 0xca8a0)
```
{F6288839}
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47508
llvm-svn: 333583
Most non-local includes of header files living under lldb/sources/
were specified with the full path starting after sources/. However, in
a few instances, other sub-directories were added to include paths, or
Normalize those few instances to follow the style used by the rest of
the codebase, to make it easier to understand.
llvm-svn: 333035
We've seen some cases on macOS where you go to instruction single
step (over a breakpoint), and single step returns but the instruction
hasn't been executed (and the pc hasn't moved.) The ThreadPlanStepOverBreakpoint
used to handle this case by accident, but the patches to handle two adjacent
breakpoints broke that accident.
This patch fixes the logic of ExplainsStop to explicitly handle the case where
the pc didn't move. It also adds a WillPop that re-enables the breakpoint we
were stepping over. We never want an unexpected path through the plan to
fool us into not doing that.
I have no idea how to make this bug happen. It is very inconsistent when it
occurs IRL. We really need a full MockProcess Plugin before we can start to write
tests for this sort of system hiccup.
<rdar://problem/38505726>
llvm-svn: 332922
PathMappingList was broken for relative and empty paths after normalization changes in FileSpec. There were also no tests for PathMappingList so I added those.
Changes include:
Change PathMappingList::ReverseRemapPath() to take FileSpec objects instead of ConstString. The only client of this was doing work to convert to and from ConstString objects for no reason.
Normalize all paths prefix and replacements that are added to the PathMappingList vector so they match the paths that have been already normalized in the debug info
Unify code in the two forms of PathMappingList::RemapPath() so only one contains the actual functionality. Prior to this, there were two versions of this code.
Use FileSpec::AppendPathComponent() and remove a long standing TODO so paths are correctly appended to each other.
Added tests for absolute, relative and empty paths.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47021
llvm-svn: 332842
The first fix wasn't enough, there is still a missing
ProcessInstanceInfo include in Host.mm. I won't be able to test a fix
before leaving work, so I am reverting both commits.
This reverts commit r332250 and the subsequent fix attempt.
llvm-svn: 332261
The Process class was only being referenced because of the last-ditch
effort in the process launchers to set a process death callback in case
one isn't set already.
Although launching a process for debugging is the most important kind of
"launch" we are doing, it is by far not the only one, so assuming this
particular callback is the one to be used is not a good idea (besides
breaking layering). Instead of assuming a particular exit callback, I
change the launcher code to require the callback to be set by the user (and fix
up the two call sites which did not set the callback already).
Reviewers: jingham, davide
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46395
llvm-svn: 332250
Summary:
Multiple threads could be calling into DoLoadImage concurrently,
only one should be allowed to create the UtilityFunction.
Reviewers: jingham
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46733
llvm-svn: 332115
Summary:
The comments on this class were out of date with the implementation, and
the implementation itself was inconsistent with our usage of the Timeout
class (I started converting everything to use this class back in D27136,
but I missed this one). I avoid duplicating the waiting logic by
introducing a templated WaitFor function, and make other functions
delegate to that. This function can be also used as a replacement for
the unused WaitForBitToBeSet functions I removed, if it turns out to be
necessary.
As this changes the meaning of a "zero" timeout, I tracked down all the
callers of these functions and updated them accordingly. Propagating the
changes to all the callers of RunShellCommand was a bit too much for
this patch, so I stopped there and will continue that in a follow-up
patch.
I also add some basic unittests for the functions I modified.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46580
llvm-svn: 331880
The function can only return in one of two ways: the Predicate value is
successfully set within the allotted time, or it isn't (the wait times
out). These states can be represented in the return value, and the extra
arg adds no value.
llvm-svn: 331458
that takes a prefix string. This simplifies the implementation and
allows plugins such as the Swift plugin to supply different prefixes
for return and error variables.
rdar://problem/39299889
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46088
llvm-svn: 331235