Commit Graph

95 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Kazu Hirata ed8fceaa09 Don't use Optional::getValue (NFC) 2022-06-20 23:35:53 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere 2fc38b2b7b
[lldb] Report debugger diagnostics as events
Report warnings and errors through events instead of printing directly
the to the debugger's error stream. By using events, IDEs such as Xcode
can report these issues in the UI instead of having them show up in the
debugger console.

The new diagnostic events are handled by the default event loop. If a
diagnostic is reported while nobody is listening for the new event
types, it is printed directly to the debugger's error stream.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121511
2022-03-16 08:33:01 -07:00
David Spickett 2937b28218 Reland "[lldb] Remove non address bits when looking up memory regions"
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
2022-02-10 10:42:49 +00:00
Pavel Labath c34698a811 [lldb] Rename Logging.h to LLDBLog.h and clean up includes
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.
2022-02-03 14:47:01 +01:00
Pavel Labath a007a6d844 [lldb] Convert "LLDB" log channel to the new API 2022-02-02 14:13:08 +01:00
Greg Clayton 7e6df41f65 [NFC] Refactor symbol table parsing.
Symbol table parsing has evolved over the years and many plug-ins contained duplicate code in the ObjectFile::GetSymtab() that used to be pure virtual. With this change, the "Symbtab *ObjectFile::GetSymtab()" is no longer virtual and will end up calling a new "void ObjectFile::ParseSymtab(Symtab &symtab)" pure virtual function to actually do the parsing. This helps centralize the code for parsing the symbol table and allows the ObjectFile base class to do all of the common work, like taking the necessary locks and creating the symbol table object itself. Plug-ins now just need to parse when they are asked to parse as the ParseSymtab function will only get called once.

This is a retry of the original patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D113965 which was reverted. There was a deadlock in the Manual DWARF indexing code during symbol preloading where the module was asked on the main thread to preload its symbols, and this would in turn cause the DWARF manual indexing to use a thread pool to index all of the compile units, and if there were relocations on the debug information sections, these threads could ask the ObjectFile to load section contents, which could cause a call to ObjectFileELF::RelocateSection() which would ask for the symbol table from the module and it would deadlock. We can't lock the module in ObjectFile::GetSymtab(), so the solution I am using is to use a llvm::once_flag to create the symbol table object once and then lock the Symtab object. Since all APIs on the symbol table use this lock, this will prevent anyone from using the symbol table before it is parsed and finalized and will avoid the deadlock I mentioned. ObjectFileELF::GetSymtab() was never locking the module lock before and would put off creating the symbol table until somewhere inside ObjectFileELF::GetSymtab(). Now we create it one time inside of the ObjectFile::GetSymtab() and immediately lock it which should be safe enough. This avoids the deadlocks and still provides safety.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114288
2021-11-30 13:54:32 -08:00
David Spickett 0df522969a Revert "Reland "[lldb] Remove non address bits when looking up memory regions""
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.
2021-11-26 15:35:02 +00:00
Greg Clayton a68ccda203 Revert "[NFC] Refactor symbol table parsing."
This reverts commit 951b107eed.

Buildbots were failing, there is a deadlock in /Users/gclayton/Documents/src/llvm/clean/llvm-project/lldb/test/Shell/SymbolFile/DWARF/DW_AT_range-DW_FORM_sec_offset.s when ELF files try to relocate things.
2021-11-17 18:07:28 -08:00
Greg Clayton 951b107eed [NFC] Refactor symbol table parsing.
Symbol table parsing has evolved over the years and many plug-ins contained duplicate code in the ObjectFile::GetSymtab() that used to be pure virtual. With this change, the "Symbtab *ObjectFile::GetSymtab()" is no longer virtual and will end up calling a new "void ObjectFile::ParseSymtab(Symtab &symtab)" pure virtual function to actually do the parsing. This helps centralize the code for parsing the symbol table and allows the ObjectFile base class to do all of the common work, like taking the necessary locks and creating the symbol table object itself. Plug-ins now just need to parse when they are asked to parse as the ParseSymtab function will only get called once.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113965
2021-11-17 15:14:01 -08:00
David Spickett fac3f20de5 Reland "[lldb] Remove non address bits when looking up memory regions"
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
2021-11-03 13:56:51 +00:00
David Spickett 5fbcf67734 Revert "[lldb] Remove non address bits when looking up memory regions"
This reverts commit 6f5ce43b43 due to
build failure on Windows.
2021-11-03 13:27:41 +00:00
David Spickett 6f5ce43b43 [lldb] Remove non address bits when looking up memory regions
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
2021-11-03 11:10:42 +00:00
Pavel Labath 5f4980f004 [lldb] Remove ConstString from Process, ScriptInterpreter and StructuredData plugin names 2021-10-28 10:15:03 +02:00
Pavel Labath a3939e159f [lldb] Return StringRef from PluginInterface::GetPluginName
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
2021-10-18 10:14:42 +02:00
Pavel Labath b03126768a [lldb] Remove PluginInterface::GetPluginVersion
In all these years, we haven't found a use for this function (it has
zero callers). Lets just remove the boilerplate.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109600
2021-09-13 10:29:00 +02:00
Jonas Devlieghere fd2433e139 [lldb] Replace default bodies of special member functions with = default;
Replace default bodies of special member functions with = default;

$ run-clang-tidy.py -header-filter='lldb' -checks='-*,modernize-use-equals-default' -fix ,

https://clang.llvm.org/extra/clang-tidy/checks/modernize-use-equals-default.html

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104041
2021-07-02 11:31:16 -07:00
Martin Storsjö e50f9c419a [lldb] Rename StringRef _lower() method calls to _insensitive() 2021-06-25 00:22:01 +03:00
David Spickett 7a580f3c28 [lldb] Remove redundant calls to set eReturnStatusFailed
Since https://reviews.llvm.org/D103701 AppendError<...>
sets this for you.

This change includes all of the non-command uses.

Some uses remain where it's either tricky to reason about
the logic, or they aren't paired with AppendError calls.

Reviewed By: teemperor

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104379
2021-06-17 12:21:54 +01:00
Raphael Isemann 32f252a765 [lldb][NFC] Fix -Wdocumentation issue in ProcessMinidump 2021-03-29 19:40:41 +02:00
Walter Erquinigo 4bb6244871 [ThreadPlan] fix exec on Linux 2021-01-25 11:30:48 -08:00
Michał Górny 18e4272a4f [lldb] Prevent 'process connect' from using local-only plugins
Add a 'can_connect' parameter to Process plugin initialization, and use
it to filter plugins to these capable of remote connections.  This is
used to prevent 'process connect' from picking up a plugin that can only
be used locally, e.g. the legacy FreeBSD plugin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91810
2020-11-23 09:48:55 +01:00
Walter Erquinigo fb19f11ef4 [trace][intel-pt] Scaffold the 'thread trace start | stop' commands
Depends on D90490.

The stop command is simple and invokes the new method Trace::StopTracingThread(thread).

On the other hand, the start command works by delegating its implementation to a CommandObject provided by the Trace plugin. This is necessary because each trace plugin needs different options for this command. There's even the chance that a Trace plugin can't support live tracing, but instead supports offline decoding and analysis, which means that "thread trace dump instructions" works but "thread trace start" doest. Because of this and a few other reasons, it's better to have each plugin provide this implementation.

Besides, I'm using the GetSupportedTraceType method introduced in D90490 to quickly infer what's the trace plug-in that works for the current process.

As an implementation note, I moved CommandObjectIterateOverThreads to its header so that I can use it from the IntelPT plugin. Besides, the actual start and stop logic for intel-pt is not part of this diff.

Reviewed By: clayborg

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90729
2020-11-18 18:24:36 -08:00
Joseph Tremoulet d30797b404 [lldb] Minidump: check for .text hash match with directory
When opening a minidump, we might discover that it reports a UUID for a
module that doesn't match the build ID, but rather a hash of the .text
section (according to either of two different hash functions, used by
breakpad and Facebook respectively).  The current logic searches for a
module by filename only to check the hash; this change updates it to
first search by directory+filename.  This is important when the
directory specified in the minidump must be interpreted relative to a
user-provided sysoort, as the leaf directory won't be in the search path
in that case.

Also add a regression test; without this change, module validation fails
because we have just the placeholder module which reports as its path
the platform path in the minidump.

Reviewed By: clayborg

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89155
2020-10-16 09:32:08 -04:00
Greg Clayton c55db4600b Load correct module for linux and android when duplicates exist in minidump.
Breakpad creates minidump files that can a module loaded multiple times. We found that when a process mmap's the object file for a library, this can confuse breakpad into creating multiple modules in the module list. This patch fixes the GetFilteredModules() to check the linux maps for permissions and use the one that has execute permissions. Typically when people mmap a file into memory they don't map it as executable. This helps people to correctly load minidump files for post mortem analysis.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86375
2020-08-26 15:48:34 -07:00
Greg Clayton 0e6c9a6e79 Add hashing of the .text section to ProcessMinidump.
Breakpad will always have a UUID for binaries when it creates minidump files. If an ELF files has a GNU build ID, it will use that. If it doesn't, it will create one by hashing up to the first 4096 bytes of the .text section. LLDB was not able to load these binaries even when we had the right binary because the UUID didn't match. LLDB will use the GNU build ID first as the main UUID for a binary and fallback onto a 8 byte CRC if a binary doesn't have one. With this fix, we will check for the Breakpad hash or the Facebook hash (a modified version of the breakpad hash that collides a bit less) and accept binaries when these hashes match.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86261
2020-08-24 11:43:50 -07:00
Kazuaki Ishizaki e9264b746b [lldb] NFC: Fix trivial typo in comments, documents, and messages
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77460
2020-04-07 01:06:16 +09:00
Jonas Devlieghere bba9ba8d95 [lldb/Plugin] s/LLDB_PLUGIN/LLDB_PLUGIN_DEFINE/ (NFC)
Rename LLDB_PLUGIN to LLDB_PLUGIN_DEFINE as Pavel suggested in D73067 to
avoid name conflict.
2020-02-14 09:58:24 -08:00
Martin Storsjö 6115bd9ba2 [LLDB] Fix GCC warnings about extra semicolons. NFC. 2020-02-10 11:20:44 +02:00
Jonas Devlieghere fbb4d1e43d [lldb/Plugins] Use external functions to (de)initialize plugins
This is a step towards making the initialize and terminate calls be
generated by CMake, which in turn is towards making it possible to
disable plugins at configuration time.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74245
2020-02-07 15:28:27 -08:00
Raphael Isemann 808142876c [lldb][NFC] Fix all formatting errors in .cpp file headers
Summary:
A *.cpp file header in LLDB (and in LLDB) should like this:
```
//===-- TestUtilities.cpp -------------------------------------------------===//
```
However in LLDB most of our source files have arbitrary changes to this format and
these changes are spreading through LLDB as folks usually just use the existing
source files as templates for their new files (most notably the unnecessary
editor language indicator `-*- C++ -*-` is spreading and in every review
someone is pointing out that this is wrong, resulting in people pointing out that this
is done in the same way in other files).

This patch removes most of these inconsistencies including the editor language indicators,
all the different missing/additional '-' characters, files that center the file name, missing
trailing `===//` (mostly caused by clang-format breaking the line).

Reviewers: aprantl, espindola, jfb, shafik, JDevlieghere

Reviewed By: JDevlieghere

Subscribers: dexonsmith, wuzish, emaste, sdardis, nemanjai, kbarton, MaskRay, atanasyan, arphaman, jfb, abidh, jsji, JDevlieghere, usaxena95, lldb-commits

Tags: #lldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73258
2020-01-24 08:52:55 +01:00
Pavel Labath 468ca490c6 [lldb] Allow loading of minidumps with no process id
Summary:
Normally, on linux we retrieve the process ID from the LinuxProcStatus
stream (which is just the contents of /proc/%d/status pseudo-file).

However, this stream is not strictly required (it's a breakpad
extension), and we are encountering a fair amount of minidumps which do
not have it present. It's not clear whether this is the case with all
these minidumps, but the two known situations where this stream can be
missing are:
- /proc filesystem not mounted (or something to that effect)
- process crashing after exhausting (almost) all file descriptors (so
  the minidump writer may not be able to open the /proc file)

Since this is a corner case which will become less and less relevant
(crashpad-generated minidumps should not suffer from this problem), I
work around this problem by hardcoding the PID to 1 in these cases.
The same thing is done by the gdb plugin when talking to a stub which
does not report a process id (e.g. a hardware probe).

Reviewers: jingham, clayborg

Subscribers: markmentovai, lldb-commits

Tags: #lldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70238
2020-01-20 13:08:58 +01:00
Pavel Labath 193a7bfb69 minidump: Create memory regions from the sections of loaded modules
Summary:
Not all minidumps contain information about memory permissions. However,
it is still important to know which regions of memory contain
potentially executable code. This is particularly important for
unwinding on win32, as the default unwind method there relies on
scanning the stack for things which "look like" code pointers.

This patch enables ProcessMinidump to reconstruct the likely permissions
of memory regions using the sections of loaded object files. It only
does this if we don't have a better source (memory info list stream, or
linux /proc/maps) for this information, and only if the information in
the object files does not conflict with the information in the minidump.

Theoretically that last bit could be improved, since the permissions
obtained from the MemoryList streams is also only a very rough guess,
but it did not seem worthwhile to complicate the implementation because
of that because there will generally be no overlap in practice as the
MemoryList will contain the stack contents and not any module data.

The patch adds a test checking that the module section permissions are
entered into the memory region list, and also a test which demonstrate
that now the unwinder is able to correctly find return addresses even in
minidumps without memory info list streams.

There's one TODO left in this patch, which is that the "memory region"
output does not give any indication about the "don't know" values of
memory region permissions (it just prints them as if they permission bit
was set). I address this in a follow up.

Reviewers: amccarth, clayborg

Subscribers: mgrang, lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69105
2019-10-31 11:24:55 +01:00
Pavel Labath 7c603a41e2 lldb/minidump: Refactor memory region computation code
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
2019-10-25 22:33:32 +00:00
Joseph Tremoulet 77460d3888 ProcessMinidump: Suppress reporting stop for signal '0'
Summary:
The minidump exception stream can report an exception record with
signal 0.  If we try to create a stop reason with signal zero, processing
of the stop event won't find anything, and the debugger will hang.
So, simply early-out of RefreshStateAfterStop in this case.

Also set the UnixSignals object in DoLoadCore as is done for
ProcessElfCore.

Reviewers: labath, clayborg, jfb

Reviewed By: labath, clayborg

Subscribers: dexonsmith, lldb-commits

Tags: #lldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68096

llvm-svn: 375244
2019-10-18 15:02:16 +00:00
Joseph Tremoulet d094d97d02 LLDB: Use LLVM's type for minidump ExceptionStream [NFC]
Summary: The types defined for it in LLDB are now redundant with core types.

Reviewers: labath, clayborg

Reviewed By: clayborg

Subscribers: lldb-commits

Tags: #lldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68658

llvm-svn: 375243
2019-10-18 14:59:10 +00:00
Greg Clayton 0156be59b4 Fix a crasher due to an assert when two files have the same UUID but different paths.
Summary: The PlaceholderObjectFile has an assert in SetLoadAddress that fires if "m_base == value" is not true. To avoid this, we create check that the base address matches, and if it doesn't we clear the module that was found using the UUID so that we create a new PlaceholderObjectFile. Added a test to cover this issue.

Reviewers: labath, aadsm, dvlahovski

Subscribers: lldb-commits

Tags: #lldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68106

llvm-svn: 374242
2019-10-09 22:03:15 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere a8f3ae7c9c [LLDB] Migrate llvm::make_unique to std::make_unique
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
2019-08-14 22:19:23 +00:00
Konrad Kleine 248a13057a [lldb] NFC modernize codebase with modernize-use-nullptr
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
2019-05-23 11:14:47 +00:00
Pavel Labath 78c1dcb7b7 minidump: Don't eagerly resolve module paths read from the minidump
This can cause us to return paths to files on the local filesystem even
if we don't end up using that file (for instance because the file is not
a real module).

llvm-svn: 360432
2019-05-10 15:05:26 +00:00
Pavel Labath 6d40c29a7e Minidump: use ThreadList parsing code from llvm/Object
llvm-svn: 360412
2019-05-10 09:36:11 +00:00
Raphael Isemann 1756630dfa C.128 override, virtual keyword handling
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
2019-05-03 10:03:28 +00:00
Pavel Labath 139e9f247a Minidump: Use llvm parser for reading the ModuleList stream
In this patch, I just remove the structure definitions for the
ModuleList stream and the associated parsing code. The rest of the code
is converted to work with the definitions in llvm. NFC.

llvm-svn: 358070
2019-04-10 11:07:28 +00:00
Pavel Labath ff12913b63 Minidump: use string parsing functionality from llvm
llvm-svn: 357977
2019-04-09 08:28:27 +00:00
Jason Molenda 1724a179e7 Rename Target::GetSharedModule to Target::GetOrCreateModule.
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
2019-04-08 23:03:02 +00:00
Pavel Labath 98edcd9b9c MinidumpParser: use minidump parser in llvm/Object
This patch removes the lower layers of the minidump parsing code from
the MinidumpParser class, and replaces it with the minidump parser in
llvm.

Not all functionality is already avaiable in the llvm class, but it is
enough for us to be able to stop enumerating streams manually, and rely
on the minidump directory parsing code from the llvm class.

This also removes some checked-in binaries which were used to test error
handling in the parser, as the error handling is now done (and tested)
in llvm. Instead I just add one test that ensures we correctly propagate
the errors reported by the llvm parser. The input for this test can be
written in yaml instead of a checked-in binary.

llvm-svn: 357748
2019-04-05 07:56:39 +00:00
Greg Clayton bbc428e93a Attempt #2 to get this patch working. I will watch the build bots carefully today.
Allow partial UUID matching in Minidump core file plug-in

Breakpad had bugs in earlier versions where it would take a 20 byte ELF build ID and put it into the minidump file as a 16 byte PDB70 UUID with an age of zero. This would make it impossible to do postmortem debugging with one of these older minidump files.

This fix allows partial matching of UUIDs. To do this we first try and match with the full UUID value, and then fall back to removing the original directory path from the module specification and we remove the UUID requirement, and then manually do the matching ourselves. This allows scripts to find symbols files using a symbol server, place them all in a directory, use the "setting set target.exec-search-paths" setting to specify the directory, and then load the core file. The Target::GetSharedModule() can then find the correct file without doing any other matching and load it.

Tests were added to cover a partial UUID match where the breakpad file has a 16 byte UUID and the actual file on disk has a 20 byte UUID, both where the first 16 bytes match, and don't match.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60001

llvm-svn: 357603
2019-04-03 16:30:44 +00:00
Adrian Prantl 1b5310c2df Revert r357504, r357491, r357482 because of bot breakage.
See discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D60001.

Revert Clean up windows build bot.
This reverts r357504 (git commit 380c2420ec)
Revert Fix buildbot where paths were not matching up.
This reverts r357491 (git commit 5050586860)
Revert Allow partial UUID matching in Minidump core file plug-in
This reverts r357482 (git commit 838bba9c34)

llvm-svn: 357534
2019-04-02 22:03:22 +00:00
Greg Clayton 838bba9c34 Allow partial UUID matching in Minidump core file plug-in
Breakpad had bugs in earlier versions where it would take a 20 byte ELF build ID and put it into the minidump file as a 16 byte PDB70 UUID with an age of zero. This would make it impossible to do postmortem debugging with one of these older minidump files.

This fix allows partial matching of UUIDs. To do this we first try and match with the full UUID value, and then fall back to removing the original directory path from the module specification and we remove the UUID requirement, and then manually do the matching ourselves. This allows scripts to find symbols files using a symbol server, place them all in a directory, use the "setting set target.exec-search-paths" setting to specify the directory, and then load the core file. The Target::GetSharedModule() can then find the correct file without doing any other matching and load it.

Tests were added to cover a partial UUID match where the breakpad file has a 16 byte UUID and the actual file on disk has a 20 byte UUID, both where the first 16 bytes match, and don't match.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60001

llvm-svn: 357482
2019-04-02 15:40:54 +00:00
Pavel Labath ee7ceacaca minidump: Add ability to attach (breakpad) symbol files to placeholder modules
This re-commits r354263, which was because it uncovered with handling of
modules with empty (zero) UUIDs. This would cause us to treat two
modules as intentical even though they were not. This caused an assert
in PlaceholderObjectFile::SetLoadAddress to fire, because we were trying
to load the module twice even though it was designed to be only loaded
at a specific address. (The same problem also existed with the previous
implementation, but it had no asserts to warn us about this.) These
issues have now been fixed in r356896.

windows bot. The issue there was that ObjectFilePECOFF vended its base
address through the incorrect interface. SymbolFilePDB depended on that,
which lead to assertion failures when SymbolFilePDB was attempting to
use the placeholder object files as a base. This has been fixed in
r354258

The original commit message was:

The reason this wasn't working was that ProcessMinidump was creating odd
object-file-less modules, and SymbolFileBreakpad required the module to
have an associated object file because it needed to get its base
address.

This fixes that by introducing a PlaceholderObjectFile to serve as a
dummy object file. The general idea for this is taken from D55142, but
I've reworked it a bit to avoid the need for the PlaceholderModule
class. Now that we have an object file, our modules are sufficiently
similar to regular modules that we can use the regular Module class
almost out of the box -- the only thing I needed to tweak was the
Module::CreateModuleFromObjectFile functon to set the module's FileSpec
in addition to it's architecture. This wasn't needed for ObjectFileJIT
(the other user of CreateModuleFromObjectFile), but it shouldn't hurt it
either, and the change seems like a straightforward extension of this
function.

Reviewers: clayborg, lemo, amccarth

Subscribers: lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57751

llvm-svn: 357060
2019-03-27 10:54:10 +00:00
Pavel Labath f2ffb47ff2 Minidump: Use minidump types defined in llvm
This is the next step in moving the minidump parsing into llvm. I remove
the minidump structures already defined in the llvm Object library and
convert our parser to use those. NFC.

llvm-svn: 356992
2019-03-26 13:23:01 +00:00