This is currently being done in an ad hoc way, and so for some
commands it isn't being checked. We have the info to make this check,
since commands are supposed to add their arguments to the m_arguments
field of the CommandObject. This change uses that info to check whether
the command received arguments in error.
A handful of commands weren't defining their argument types, I also had
to fix them. And a bunch of commands were checking for arguments by
hand, so I removed those checks in favor of the CommandObject one. That
also meant I had to change some tests that were checking for the ad hoc
error outputs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128453
should not receive as exceptions (some will get converted to BSD
signals instead). This is really the only stable way to ensure that
a Mach exception gets converted to it's equivalent BSD signal. For
programs that rely on BSD signal handlers, this has to happen or you
can't even get the program to invoke the signal handler when under
the debugger.
This builds on a previous solution to this problem which required you
start debugserver with the -U flag. This was not very discoverable
and required lldb be the one to launch debugserver, which is not always
the case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125434
Currently, all data buffers are assumed to be writable. This is a
problem on macOS where it's not allowed to load unsigned binaries in
memory as writable. To be more precise, MAP_RESILIENT_CODESIGN and
MAP_RESILIENT_MEDIA need to be set for mapped (unsigned) binaries on our
platform.
Binaries are mapped through FileSystem::CreateDataBuffer which returns a
DataBufferLLVM. The latter is backed by a llvm::WritableMemoryBuffer
because every DataBuffer in LLDB is considered to be writable. In order
to use a read-only llvm::MemoryBuffer I had to split our abstraction
around it.
This patch distinguishes between a DataBuffer (read-only) and
WritableDataBuffer (read-write) and updates LLDB to use the appropriate
one.
rdar://74890607
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122856
This patch adds a getter for the process' system architecture. I went
with Process::GetSystemArchitecture to match
Platform::GetSystemArchitecture.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121443
This workaround is the source of an awkwared Process->Platform
dependency. While this could be solved in various ways (the only thing
we really use is the plugin name), it may be better to just remove it --
the workaround was added 10 years ago (43c555dfc), and the affected
debugservers were "old" even then, so hopefully they are not in use
anymore.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121305
This patch changes the return value of Platform::GetName() to a
StringRef, and uses the opportunity (compile errors) to change some
callsites to use GetPluginName() instead. The two methods still remain
hardwired to return the same thing, but this will change once the ideas
in
<https://discourse.llvm.org/t/multiple-platforms-with-the-same-name/59594>
are implemented.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119146
All current callers set the argument to false. monitor_signals=true used
to be used in the Process plugins (which needed to know when the
debugged process gets a signal), but this implementation has several
serious issues, which means that individual process plugins now
orchestrate the monitoring of debugged processes themselves.
This allows us to simplify the implementation (no need to play with
process groups), and the interface (we only catch fatal events, so the
callback is always called just once).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120425
Accept a function object instead of a raw pointer. This avoids a bunch
of boilerplate typically needed to pass arguments to the thread
functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120321
This reverts commit 0df522969a.
Additional checks are added to fix the detection of the last memory region
in GetMemoryRegions or repeating the "memory region" command when the
target has non-address bits.
Normally you keep reading from address 0, looking up each region's end
address until you get LLDB_INVALID_ADDR as the region end address.
(0xffffffffffffffff)
This is what the remote will return once you go beyond the last mapped region:
[0x0000fffffffdf000-0x0001000000000000) rw- [stack]
[0x0001000000000000-0xffffffffffffffff) ---
Problem is that when we "fix" the lookup address, we remove some bits
from it. On an AArch64 system we have 48 bit virtual addresses, so when
we fix the end address of the [stack] region the result is 0.
So we loop back to the start.
[0x0000fffffffdf000-0x0001000000000000) rw- [stack]
[0x0000000000000000-0x0000000000400000) ---
To fix this I added an additional check for the last range.
If the end address of the region is different once you apply
FixDataAddress, we are at the last region.
Since the end of the last region will be the last valid mappable
address, plus 1. That 1 will be removed by the ABI plugin.
The only side effect is that on systems with non-address bits, you
won't get that last catch all unmapped region from the max virtual
address up to 0xf...f.
[0x0000fffff8000000-0x0000fffffffdf000) ---
[0x0000fffffffdf000-0x0001000000000000) rw- [stack]
<ends here>
Though in some way this is more correct because that region is not
just unmapped, it's not mappable at all.
No extra testing is needed because this is already covered by
TestMemoryRegion.py, I simply forgot to run it on system that had
both top byte ignore and pointer authentication.
This change has been tested on a qemu VM with top byte ignore,
memory tagging and pointer authentication enabled.
Reviewed By: omjavaid
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115508
Most of our code was including Log.h even though that is not where the
"lldb" log channel is defined (Log.h defines the generic logging
infrastructure). This worked because Log.h included Logging.h, even
though it should.
After the recent refactor, it became impossible the two files include
each other in this direction (the opposite inclusion is needed), so this
patch removes the workaround that was put in place and cleans up all
files to include the right thing. It also renames the file to LLDBLog to
better reflect its purpose.
This patch makes use of c++ type checking and scoped enums to make
logging statements shorter and harder to misuse.
Defines like LIBLLDB_LOG_PROCESS are replaces with LLDBLog::Process.
Because it now carries type information we do not need to worry about
matching a specific enum value with the right getter function -- the
compiler will now do that for us.
The main entry point for the logging machinery becomes the GetLog
(template) function, which will obtain the correct Log object based on
the enum type. It achieves this through another template function
(LogChannelFor<T>), which must be specialized for each type, and should
return the appropriate channel object.
This patch also removes the ability to log a message if multiple
categories are enabled simultaneously as it was unused and confusing.
This patch does not actually remove any of the existing interfaces. The
defines and log retrieval functions are left around as wrappers around
the new interfaces. They will be removed in follow-up patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117490
Provide minimal register definition defaults for working with servers
that implement neither target.xml nor qRegisterInfo packets. This is
useful e.g. when interacting with FreeBSD's kernel minimal gdbserver
that does not send target.xml but uses the same layout for its supported
register subset as GDB.
The prerequisite for this is the ability to determine the correct
architecture, e.g. from the target executable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116896
Support three new keys in the qProcessInfo response from the remote
gdb stub to handle the case of attaching to a core running some type
of standalone/firmware code and the stub knows the UUID and load
address-or-slide for the binary. There will be no proper DynamicLoader
plugin in this scenario, but we can try to locate and load the binary
into lldb at the correct offset.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116211
rdar://75191077
This reverts commit fac3f20de5.
I found this has broken how we detect the last memory region in
GetMemoryRegions/"memory region" command.
When you're debugging an AArch64 system with pointer authentication,
the ABI plugin will remove the top bit from the end address of the last
user mapped area.
(lldb)
[0x0000fffffffdf000-0x0001000000000000) rw- [stack]
ABI plugin removes anything above the 48th bit (48 bit virtual addresses
by default on AArch64, leaving an address of 0.
(lldb)
[0x0000000000000000-0x0000000000400000) ---
You get back a mapping for 0 and get into an infinite loop.
The reworking of the gdb client tests into the PlatformClientTestBase broke
the test for this. I did the mutatis mutandis for the move, but the test
still fails. Reverting till I have time to figure out why.
This reverts commit b715b79d54.
We don't actually need a local copy of the main executable to debug
a remote process. So instead of treating "no local module" as an error,
see if the LaunchInfo has an executable it wants lldb to use, and if so
use it. Then report whatever error the remote server returns.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113521
GDB and LLDB use different signal models. GDB uses a predefined set
of signal codes, and maps platform's signos to them. On the other hand,
LLDB has historically simply passed native signos.
In order to improve compatibility between LLDB and gdbserver, the GDB
signal model should be used. However, GDB does not provide a mapping
for all existing signals on Linux and unsupported signals are passed
as 'unknown'. Limiting LLDB to this behavior could be considered
a regression.
To get the best of both worlds, use the LLDB signal model when talking
to lldb-server, and the GDB signal model otherwise. For this purpose,
new versions of lldb-server indicate "native-signals+" via qSupported.
At the same time, we also detect older versions of lldb-server
via QThreadSuffixSupported for backwards compatibility. If neither test
succeeds, we assume gdbserver or another implementation using GDB model.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108078
This reverts commit 5fbcf67734.
ProcessDebugger is used in ProcessWindows and NativeProcessWindows.
I thought I was simplifying things by renaming to DoGetMemoryRegionInfo
in ProcessDebugger but the Native process side expects "GetMemoryRegionInfo".
Follow the pattern that WriteMemory uses. So:
* ProcessWindows::DoGetMemoryRegioninfo calls ProcessDebugger::GetMemoryRegionInfo
* NativeProcessWindows::GetMemoryRegionInfo does the same
On AArch64 we have various things using the non address bits
of pointers. This means when you lookup their containing region
you won't find it if you don't remove them.
This changes Process GetMemoryRegionInfo to a non virtual method
that uses the current ABI plugin to remove those bits. Then it
calls DoGetMemoryRegionInfo.
That function does the actual work and is virtual to be overriden
by Process implementations.
A test case is added that runs on AArch64 Linux using the top
byte ignore feature.
Reviewed By: omjavaid
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102757
Fix regression in processing generic regnums that was introduced
in fa456505b8 ("[lldb] [gdb-remote]
Refactor getting remote regs to use local vector"). Since then,
the "generic" field was wrongly interpreted as integer rather than
string constant.
Thanks to Ted Woodward for noticing and providing the correct code.
HardcodeARMRegisters() is a hack that was supposed to be used "until
we can get an updated debugserver down on the devices". Since it was
introduced back in 2012, there is a good chance that the debugserver
has been updated at least once since then. Removing this code makes
transition to the new DynamicRegisterInfo API easier.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111491
Optimize the iterator comparison logic to compare Current.data()
pointers. Use std::tie for assignments from std::pair. Replace
the custom class with a function returning iterator_range.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110535
gdbserver does not expose combined ymm* registers but rather XSAVE-style
split xmm* and ymm*h portions. Extend value_regs to support combining
multiple registers and use it to create user-friendly ymm* registers
that are combined from split xmm* and ymm*h portions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108937
gdbserver does not expose combined ymm* registers but rather XSAVE-style
split xmm* and ymm*h portions. Extend value_regs to support combining
multiple registers and use it to create user-friendly ymm* registers
that are combined from split xmm* and ymm*h portions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108937
Remove Status::WasInterrupted() that checks whether the underlying error
code matches EINTR. ProcessGDBRemote::ConnectToDebugserver() is its
only call site, and it does not seem correct there. After all, EINTR
is precisely when we want to retry, not stop retrying. Furthermore,
it should not really matter since we should be catching EINTR
immediately via llvm::sys::RetryAfterSignal() but that's another story.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111908
There is no reason why this function should be returning a ConstString.
While modifying these files, I also fixed several instances where
GetPluginName and GetPluginNameStatic were returning different strings.
I am not changing the return type of GetPluginNameStatic in this patch, as that
would necessitate additional changes, and this patch is big enough as it is.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111877
Adjust the encoding and format applied to i387_ext and vec* type
registers from gdbserver to match lldb-server. Both types are now
displayed as vector of uint8 instead of float and integer formats used
before. Additionally, this fixes display of STi registers when they do
not carry floating-point data (they are also used to hold MMX vectors).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108468
Add an overload of DynamicRegisterInfo::SetRegisterInfo() that accepts
a std::vector<Register> as an argument. This moves the conversion
from DRI::Register to RegisterInfo directly into DynamicRegisterInfo,
and avoids the necessity of creating fully-compatible intermediate
RegisterInfo instances.
While the new method could technically reuse AddRegister(), the ultimate
goal is to replace AddRegister() with SetRegisterInfo() entirely.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111435
Call ABI::AugmentRegisterInfo() once with a vector of all defined
registers rather than calling it for every individual register. Move
and rename RemoteRegisterInfo from gdb-remote to
DynamicRegisterInfo::Register, and use this class when augmenting
registers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111142
ReadExtFeature provides equivalent functionality. Also fix a but in
ReadExtFeature, which prevented it from being used for auxv data (it
contains nul characters).
The previous version of the patch did not update the definitions in
conditionally compiled code. This patch includes changes to ARC and
windows targets.
Original commit message was:
These were added to support some mips registers on linux, but linux mips
support has now been removed due.
They are still referenced in the freebds mips implementation, but the
completeness of that implementation is also unknown. All other
architectures just set these fields to zero, which is a cause of
significant bloat in our register info definitions.
Arm also has registers with variable sizes, but they were implemented in
a more gdb-compatible fashion and don't use this feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110914
This reverts commit 00e704bf08.
This commit should should have updated
llvm/llvm-project/lldb/source/Plugins/ABI/ARC/ABISysV_arc.cpp like the other
architectures.