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:
For context: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68293
We need a way to show all the processes on android regardless of the user id.
When you run `platform process list`, you only see the processes with the same user as the user that launched lldb-server. However, it's quite useful to see all the processes, though, and it will lay a foundation for full apk debugging support from lldb.
Before:
```
PID PARENT USER TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ======================== ============================
3234 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android adbd
8034 3234 aarch64-unknown-linux-android sh
9096 3234 aarch64-unknown-linux-android sh
9098 9096 aarch64-unknown-linux-android lldb-server
(lldb) ^D
```
Now:
```
(lldb) platform process list -x
205 matching processes were found on "remote-android"
PID PARENT USER TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ======================== ============================
1 0 init
524 1 init
525 1 init
531 1 ueventd
568 1 logd
569 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android servicemanager
570 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android hwservicemanager
571 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android vndservicemanager
577 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android qseecomd
580 577 aarch64-unknown-linux-android qseecomd
...
23816 979 com.android.providers.calendar
24600 979 com.verizon.mips.services
27888 979 com.hualai
28043 2378 com.android.chrome:sandboxed_process0
31449 979 com.att.shm
31779 979 com.samsung.android.authfw
31846 979 com.samsung.android.server.iris
32014 979 com.samsung.android.MtpApplication
32045 979 com.samsung.InputEventApp
```
Reviewers: labath,xiaobai,aadsm,clayborg
Subscribers:
> llvm-svn: 374584
llvm-svn: 374631
Summary:
For context: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68293
We need a way to show all the processes on android regardless of the user id.
When you run `platform process list`, you only see the processes with the same user as the user that launched lldb-server. However, it's quite useful to see all the processes, though, and it will lay a foundation for full apk debugging support from lldb.
Before:
```
PID PARENT USER TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ======================== ============================
3234 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android adbd
8034 3234 aarch64-unknown-linux-android sh
9096 3234 aarch64-unknown-linux-android sh
9098 9096 aarch64-unknown-linux-android lldb-server
(lldb) ^D
```
Now:
```
(lldb) platform process list -x
205 matching processes were found on "remote-android"
PID PARENT USER TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ======================== ============================
1 0 init
524 1 init
525 1 init
531 1 ueventd
568 1 logd
569 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android servicemanager
570 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android hwservicemanager
571 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android vndservicemanager
577 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android qseecomd
580 577 aarch64-unknown-linux-android qseecomd
...
23816 979 com.android.providers.calendar
24600 979 com.verizon.mips.services
27888 979 com.hualai
28043 2378 com.android.chrome:sandboxed_process0
31449 979 com.att.shm
31779 979 com.samsung.android.authfw
31846 979 com.samsung.android.server.iris
32014 979 com.samsung.android.MtpApplication
32045 979 com.samsung.InputEventApp
```
Reviewers: labath,xiaobai,aadsm,clayborg
Subscribers:
> llvm-svn: 374584
llvm-svn: 374626
Summary:
For context: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68293
We need a way to show all the processes on android regardless of the user id.
When you run `platform process list`, you only see the processes with the same user as the user that launched lldb-server. However, it's quite useful to see all the processes, though, and it will lay a foundation for full apk debugging support from lldb.
Before:
```
PID PARENT USER TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ======================== ============================
3234 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android adbd
8034 3234 aarch64-unknown-linux-android sh
9096 3234 aarch64-unknown-linux-android sh
9098 9096 aarch64-unknown-linux-android lldb-server
(lldb) ^D
```
Now:
```
(lldb) platform process list -x
205 matching processes were found on "remote-android"
PID PARENT USER TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ======================== ============================
1 0 init
524 1 init
525 1 init
531 1 ueventd
568 1 logd
569 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android servicemanager
570 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android hwservicemanager
571 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android vndservicemanager
577 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android qseecomd
580 577 aarch64-unknown-linux-android qseecomd
...
23816 979 com.android.providers.calendar
24600 979 com.verizon.mips.services
27888 979 com.hualai
28043 2378 com.android.chrome:sandboxed_process0
31449 979 com.att.shm
31779 979 com.samsung.android.authfw
31846 979 com.samsung.android.server.iris
32014 979 com.samsung.android.MtpApplication
32045 979 com.samsung.InputEventApp
```
Reviewers: labath,xiaobai,aadsm,clayborg
Subscribers:
> llvm-svn: 374584
llvm-svn: 374622
Summary:
For context: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68293
We need a way to show all the processes on android regardless of the user id.
When you run `platform process list`, you only see the processes with the same user as the user that launched lldb-server. However, it's quite useful to see all the processes, though, and it will lay a foundation for full apk debugging support from lldb.
Before:
```
PID PARENT USER TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ======================== ============================
3234 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android adbd
8034 3234 aarch64-unknown-linux-android sh
9096 3234 aarch64-unknown-linux-android sh
9098 9096 aarch64-unknown-linux-android lldb-server
(lldb) ^D
```
Now:
```
(lldb) platform process list -x
205 matching processes were found on "remote-android"
PID PARENT USER TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ======================== ============================
1 0 init
524 1 init
525 1 init
531 1 ueventd
568 1 logd
569 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android servicemanager
570 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android hwservicemanager
571 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android vndservicemanager
577 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android qseecomd
580 577 aarch64-unknown-linux-android qseecomd
...
23816 979 com.android.providers.calendar
24600 979 com.verizon.mips.services
27888 979 com.hualai
28043 2378 com.android.chrome:sandboxed_process0
31449 979 com.att.shm
31779 979 com.samsung.android.authfw
31846 979 com.samsung.android.server.iris
32014 979 com.samsung.android.MtpApplication
32045 979 com.samsung.InputEventApp
```
Reviewers: labath,xiaobai,aadsm,clayborg
Subscribers:
> llvm-svn: 374584
llvm-svn: 374620
Summary:
For context: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68293
We need a way to show all the processes on android regardless of the user id.
When you run `platform process list`, you only see the processes with the same user as the user that launched lldb-server. However, it's quite useful to see all the processes, though, and it will lay a foundation for full apk debugging support from lldb.
Before:
```
PID PARENT USER TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ======================== ============================
3234 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android adbd
8034 3234 aarch64-unknown-linux-android sh
9096 3234 aarch64-unknown-linux-android sh
9098 9096 aarch64-unknown-linux-android lldb-server
(lldb) ^D
```
Now:
```
(lldb) platform process list -x
205 matching processes were found on "remote-android"
PID PARENT USER TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ======================== ============================
1 0 init
524 1 init
525 1 init
531 1 ueventd
568 1 logd
569 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android servicemanager
570 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android hwservicemanager
571 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android vndservicemanager
577 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android qseecomd
580 577 aarch64-unknown-linux-android qseecomd
...
23816 979 com.android.providers.calendar
24600 979 com.verizon.mips.services
27888 979 com.hualai
28043 2378 com.android.chrome:sandboxed_process0
31449 979 com.att.shm
31779 979 com.samsung.android.authfw
31846 979 com.samsung.android.server.iris
32014 979 com.samsung.android.MtpApplication
32045 979 com.samsung.InputEventApp
```
Reviewers: labath,xiaobai,aadsm,clayborg
Subscribers:
> llvm-svn: 374584
llvm-svn: 374609
Summary:
For context: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68293
We need a way to show all the processes on android regardless of the user id.
When you run `platform process list`, you only see the processes with the same user as the user that launched lldb-server. However, it's quite useful to see all the processes, though, and it will lay a foundation for full apk debugging support from lldb.
Before:
```
PID PARENT USER TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ======================== ============================
3234 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android adbd
8034 3234 aarch64-unknown-linux-android sh
9096 3234 aarch64-unknown-linux-android sh
9098 9096 aarch64-unknown-linux-android lldb-server
(lldb) ^D
```
Now:
```
(lldb) platform process list -x
205 matching processes were found on "remote-android"
PID PARENT USER TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ======================== ============================
1 0 init
524 1 init
525 1 init
531 1 ueventd
568 1 logd
569 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android servicemanager
570 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android hwservicemanager
571 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android vndservicemanager
577 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android qseecomd
580 577 aarch64-unknown-linux-android qseecomd
...
23816 979 com.android.providers.calendar
24600 979 com.verizon.mips.services
27888 979 com.hualai
28043 2378 com.android.chrome:sandboxed_process0
31449 979 com.att.shm
31779 979 com.samsung.android.authfw
31846 979 com.samsung.android.server.iris
32014 979 com.samsung.android.MtpApplication
32045 979 com.samsung.InputEventApp
```
Reviewers: labath,xiaobai,aadsm,clayborg
Subscribers:
llvm-svn: 374584
This patch adds an implementation of unwinding using PE EH info. It allows to
get almost ideal call stacks on 64-bit Windows systems (except some epilogue
cases, but I believe that they can be fixed with unwind plan disassembly
augmentation in the future).
To achieve the goal the CallFrameInfo abstraction was made. It is based on the
DWARFCallFrameInfo class interface with a few changes to make it less
DWARF-specific.
To implement the new interface for PECOFF object files the class PECallFrameInfo
was written. It uses the next helper classes:
- UnwindCodesIterator helps to iterate through UnwindCode structures (and
processes chained infos transparently);
- EHProgramBuilder with the use of UnwindCodesIterator constructs EHProgram;
- EHProgram is, by fact, a vector of EHInstructions. It creates an abstraction
over the low-level unwind codes and simplifies work with them. It contains
only the information that is relevant to unwinding in the unified form. Also
the required unwind codes are read from the object file only once with it;
- EHProgramRange allows to take a range of EHProgram and to build an unwind row
for it.
So, PECallFrameInfo builds the EHProgram with EHProgramBuilder, takes the ranges
corresponding to every offset in prologue and builds the rows of the resulted
unwind plan. The resulted plan covers the whole range of the function except the
epilogue.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, asmith, amccarth, clayborg, JDevlieghere, stella.stamenova, labath, espindola
Reviewed By: jasonmolenda
Subscribers: leonid.mashinskiy, emaste, mgorny, aprantl, arichardson, MaskRay, lldb-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67347
llvm-svn: 374528
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
Summary:
We now have valid files that will return NULL from GetStream().
libedit and the LLDB gui are the only places left that need FILE*
streams. Both are doing curses-like user interaction that only
make sense with a real terminal anyway, so there is no need to convert
them off of their use of FILE*. But we should check for null streams
before enabling these features.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, jasonmolenda, labath
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere, labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68677
llvm-svn: 374197
Summary:
For context: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68293
We need a way to show all the processes on android regardless of the user id.
When you run `platform process list`, you only see the processes with the same user as the user that launched lldb-server. However, it's quite useful to see all the processes, though, and it will lay a foundation for full apk debugging support from lldb.
Before:
```
PID PARENT USER TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ======================== ============================
3234 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android adbd
8034 3234 aarch64-unknown-linux-android sh
9096 3234 aarch64-unknown-linux-android sh
9098 9096 aarch64-unknown-linux-android lldb-server
(lldb) ^D
```
Now:
```
(lldb) platform process list -x
205 matching processes were found on "remote-android"
PID PARENT USER TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ======================== ============================
1 0 init
524 1 init
525 1 init
531 1 ueventd
568 1 logd
569 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android servicemanager
570 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android hwservicemanager
571 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android vndservicemanager
577 1 aarch64-unknown-linux-android qseecomd
580 577 aarch64-unknown-linux-android qseecomd
...
23816 979 com.android.providers.calendar
24600 979 com.verizon.mips.services
27888 979 com.hualai
28043 2378 com.android.chrome:sandboxed_process0
31449 979 com.att.shm
31779 979 com.samsung.android.authfw
31846 979 com.samsung.android.server.iris
32014 979 com.samsung.android.MtpApplication
32045 979 com.samsung.InputEventApp
```
Reviewers: labath,xiaobai,aadsm,clayborg
Subscribers:
llvm-svn: 373931
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
Use this in the scripted breakpoint command. Added some tests for parsing
the key/value options. This uncovered a bug in handling parsing errors mid-line.
I also fixed that bug.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68363
llvm-svn: 373673
In r368345 I accidentally introduced a regression that would
over-report the number of matches found by FindTypes if the
DeclContext Filter was hit.
This patch simply removes the size_t return parameter altogether —
it's not that useful.
rdar://problem/55500457
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68169
llvm-svn: 373344
The problem with r370734 was that it removed the code for resetting the options in
OptionParsingStarting. This caused that once a 'frame select -r ...' command was executed,
we kept the relative index argument for all following 'frame select ...' invocations (even
the ones with an absolute index as they are the same command object). See rdar://55791276.
This relands the patch but keeps the code that resets the command options before execution.
llvm-svn: 373201
This somehow caused that 'frame select X' ends up being interpreted as 'frame select -r 1' when 'up' or 'down'
were run before 'frame select X'. See rdar://55791276.
Partly reverting to unbreak master. The changes that aren't reverted are the generic 'frame select -r' tests
that are obviously NFC and test existing behavior.
llvm-svn: 373194
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: Usually, SIGINT and SIGSTOP don't imply a crash, e.g. SIGSTOP is sent on process launch and attach on some platforms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67776
llvm-svn: 372961
This is the only legitimate use we currently have for modifying
a CompletionRequest. Add a utility function for this purpose
and remove the remaining setters which go against the idea of
having an immutable CompletionRequest.
llvm-svn: 372858
The fact that index==-1 means "no arguments" is not obvious and only
used in one place from what I can tell. Also fixes several warnings
about using the cursor index as if it was a size_t when comparing.
Not fully NFC as we now also correctly update the partial argument list
when injecting the fake empty argument in the CompletionRequest
constructor.
llvm-svn: 372566
We should in general not allow external code to fiddle with the internals of
CompletionRequest, but until this is gone let's at least provide a utility
function that makes this less dangerous.
This also now correct updates the partially parsed argument list,
but it doesn't seem to be used by anything that is behind one of
the current shift/SetCursorIndex calls, so this doesn't seeem to
fix any currently used completion.
llvm-svn: 372556
This patch completes the dump functionality by adding support for
dumping a reproducer's GDB remote packets.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67636
llvm-svn: 372046
This adds a reproducer dump commands which makes it possible to inspect
a reproducer from inside LLDB. Currently it supports the Files, Commands
and Version providers. I'm planning to add support for the GDB Remote
provider in a follow-up patch.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67474
llvm-svn: 371909
The StringRef should always be identical to the C string, so we
might as well just create the StringRef from the C-string. This
might be slightly slower until we implement the storage of ArgEntry
with a string instead of a std::unique_ptr<char[]>. Until then we
have to do the additional strlen on the C string to construct the
StringRef.
llvm-svn: 371842
The bugreport command exists to create domain-specific bug reports.
Currently it has one implementation for filing bugs on the unwinder. As
far as we can tell, it has never been of use. Although not exactly the
same as the reproducers, it's a bit confusing to have two parallel
command trees for (kind of) the same thing.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65469
llvm-svn: 371132
We were printing the start_addr field, which is not correct, as in this
branch we are processing the memory described by cur_range. Print that
instead.
Ideally, in particular this case, the error message would also say
something about not being able to disassemble due to not having found
the module from the core file, but that is not easy to do right now, so
I'm leaving that for another time.
llvm-svn: 370898
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
Summary:
We currently have several CommandObjects that manually reimplement the checking for a selected target
or a target in the execution context (which is the selected target when they are invoked). This patch removes
all these checks and replaces them by setting the eCommandRequiresTarget flag that Pavel suggested. With
this flag we are doing the same check but without having to duplicate this code in all these CommandObjects.
I also added a `GetSelectedTarget()` variant of the `GetSelectedOrDummyTarget()` function to the
CommandObject that checks that the flag is set and then returns a reference to the target. I didn't rewrite
all the `target` variables from `Target *` to `Target &` in this patch as last time this change caused a lot of merge
conflicts in Swift and I would prefer having that in a separate NFC commit.
Reviewers: labath, clayborg
Reviewed By: labath, clayborg
Subscribers: clayborg, JDevlieghere, jingham, amccarth, abidh, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66863
llvm-svn: 370571
On the command line we usually insert a space after a completion to indicate that
the completion was successful. After the completion API refactoring, this also
happens with directories which essentially breaks file path completion (as
adding a space terminates the path and starts a new arg). This patch restores the old
behavior by again allowing partial completions. Also extends the iohandler
and SB API tests as the implementation for this is different in Editline
and SB API.
llvm-svn: 370043
Summary:
We always have a dummy target, so any error handling regarding a missing dummy target is dead code now.
Also makes the CommandObject methods that return Target& to express this fact in the API.
This patch just for the CommandObject part of LLDB. I'll migrate the rest of LLDB in a follow-up patch that's WIP.
Reviewers: labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: abidh, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66737
llvm-svn: 369939
Summary:
We currently have a bunch of code that is supposed to handle invalid command options, but
all this code is unreachable because invalid options are already handled in `Options::Parse`.
The only way we can reach this code is when we declare but then not implement an option
(which will be made impossible with D65386, which is also when we can completely remove
the `default` cases).
This patch replaces all this code with `llvm_unreachable` to make clear this is dead code
that can't be reached.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66522
llvm-svn: 369625
Summary:
We still have some leftovers of the old completion API in the internals of
LLDB that haven't been replaced by the new CompletionRequest. These leftovers
are:
* The return values (int/size_t) in all completion functions.
* Our result array that starts indexing at 1.
* `WordComplete` mode.
I didn't replace them back then because it's tricky to figure out what exactly they
are used for and the completion code is relatively untested. I finally got around
to writing more tests for the API and understanding the semantics, so I think it's
a good time to get rid of them.
A few words why those things should be removed/replaced:
* The return values are really cryptic, partly redundant and rarely documented.
They are also completely ignored by Xcode, so whatever information they contain will end up
breaking Xcode's completion mechanism. They are also partly impossible to even implement
as we assign negative values special meaning and our completion API sometimes returns size_t.
Completion functions are supposed to return -2 to rewrite the current line. We seem to use this
in some untested code path to expand the history repeat character to the full command, but
I haven't figured out why that doesn't work at the moment.
Completion functions return -1 to 'insert the completion character', but that isn't implemented
(even though we seem to activate this feature in LLDB sometimes).
All positive values have to match the number of results. This is obviously just redundant information
as the user can just look at the result list to get that information (which is what Xcode does).
* The result array that starts indexing at 1 is obviously unexpected. The first element of the array is
reserved for the common prefix of all completions (e.g. "foobar" and "footar" -> "foo"). The idea is
that we calculate this to make the life of the API caller easier, but obviously forcing people to have
1-based indices is not helpful (or even worse, forces them to manually copy the results to make it
0-based like Xcode has to do).
* The `WordComplete` mode indicates that LLDB should enter a space behind the completion. The
idea is that we let the top-level API know that we just provided a full completion. Interestingly we
`WordComplete` is just a single bool that somehow represents all N completions. And we always
provide full completions in LLDB, so in theory it should always be true.
The only use it currently serves is providing redundant information about whether we have a single
definitive completion or not (which we already know from the number of results we get).
This patch essentially removes `WordComplete` mode and makes the result array indexed from 0.
It also removes all return values from all internal completion functions. The only non-redundant information
they contain is about rewriting the current line (which is broken), so that functionality was moved
to the CompletionRequest API. So you can now do `addCompletion("blub", "description", CompletionMode::RewriteLine)`
to do the same.
For the SB API we emulate the old behaviour by making the array indexed from 1 again with the common
prefix at index 0. I didn't keep the special negative return codes as we either never sent them before (e.g. -2) or we
didn't even implement them in the Editline handler (e.g. -1).
I tried to keep this patch minimal and I'm aware we can probably now even further simplify a bunch of related code,
but I would prefer doing this in follow-up NFC commits
Reviewers: JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: arphaman, abidh, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66536
llvm-svn: 369624
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
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
Resolve the path in the target create output. This is nice when passing
relative paths to the lldb command line driver.
$ lldb ./binary
(lldb) target create "./binary"
Current executable set to '/absolute/path/to/binary' (x86_64).
This change only affects the target create output and does not change
the debugger's behavior. It doesn't resolve symbolic links so it won't
cause confusing when debugging something like clang++ that's symlinked
to clang.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65611
llvm-svn: 368182
After the recent refactorings the SymbolVendor passthrough no longer
serve any purpose. This patch removes those methods, and updates all
callsites to go to the symbol file directly -- in most cases that just
means calling GetSymbolFile()->foo() instead of
GetSymbolVendor()->foo().
llvm-svn: 368001
Summary:
This patch removes the GetSymtab method from the SymbolVendor, which is
a no-op as it's implementation just forwards to the relevant SymbolFile.
Instead it creates a Module::GetSymtab, which calls the SymbolFile
method directly.
All callers have been updated to use the Module method directly instead
of a two phase GetSymbolVendor->GetSymtab search, which leads to reduced
intentation in a lot of deeply nested code.
Reviewers: clayborg, JDevlieghere, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65569
llvm-svn: 367820
Summary:
This is the next step in avoiding funneling all SymbolFile calls through
the SymbolVendor. Right now, it is just a convenience function, but it
allows us to update all calls to SymbolVendor functions to access the
SymbolFile directly. Once all call sites have been updated, we can
remove the GetSymbolVendor member function.
This patch just updates the calls to GetSymbolVendor, which were calling
it just so they could fetch the underlying symbol file. Other calls will
be done in follow-ups.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65435
llvm-svn: 367664
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
I was going through some of the old bugs and came across PR21069 which I
was able to reproduce. The issue is that we match the regex `^foo`
against the `DW_AT_name` in the DWARF, which for our anonymous function
is indeed `foo`. However, when we get the function name from the symbol
context, the result is `(anonymous namespace)::foo()`. This throws off
completions, which assumes that it's appending to whatever is already
present on the input, resulting in a bogus
`b fooonymous\ namespace)::foo()`.
Bug report: https://llvm.org/PR21069
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65498
llvm-svn: 367455
Summary:
Right now our CommandOptions.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 CommandOptions.inc generate it alongside the initializers.
This patch will also allow us to generate additional declarations related to that option list in
the future (e.g. a enum class representing the specific options which would make our
handling code less prone).
This patch also fixes a few option tables that didn't follow our naming style.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: abidh, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65331
llvm-svn: 367186
We dynamically allocate the option validator which means we
can't mark this list of OptionDefinitions as constexpr. It's also
more complicated than necessary.
llvm-svn: 367102
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
Beside turning the options into the new tablegen format, this patch
also fixes that a few commands had source file completions for the
"count" and "end-linenumber" arguments (which both accepted only
integers). Reason for that are that somehow we added a '1' instead
of our usual '0' value to the initial value for completion.
llvm-svn: 366425
It seems having two Options.inc files in the same project is giving our
custom Xcode project a hard time. This patch renames the new Options.inc
to CommandOptions.inc to prevent this conflict.
llvm-svn: 366196
Summary: This patch adds documentation that should make it easier to migrate from using the old initializers to the table gen format.
Reviewers: jingham
Reviewed By: jingham
Subscribers: abidh, lldb-commits, JDevlieghere
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64670
llvm-svn: 366083
Summary:
We currently have man large arrays containing initializers for our command options.
These tables are tricky maintain as we don't have any good place to check them for consistency and
it's also hard to read (`nullptr, {}, 0` is not very descriptive).
This patch fixes this by letting table gen generate those tables. This way we can have a more readable
syntax for this (especially for all the default arguments) and we can let TableCheck check them
for consistency (e.g. an option with an optional argument can't have `eArgTypeNone`, naming of flags', etc.).
Also refactoring the related data structures can now be done without changing the hundred of option initializers.
For example, this line:
```
{LLDB_OPT_SET_ALL, false, "hide-aliases", 'a', OptionParser::eNoArgument, nullptr, {}, 0, eArgTypeNone, "Hide aliases in the command list."},
```
becomes this:
```
def hide_aliases : Option<"hide-aliases", "a">, Desc<"Hide aliases in the command list.">;
```
For now I just moved a few initializers to the new format to demonstrate the change. I'll slowly migrate the other
option initializers tables in separate patches.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, davide, sgraenitz
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: jingham, xiaobai, labath, mgorny, abidh, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64365
llvm-svn: 365908
Summary:
PersistentStateExpressions (e.g. ClangPersistentVariables) have the
ability to define types using expressions that persist throughout the
debugging session. GetCompilerTypeFromPersistentDecl is a useful
operation to have if you need to use any of those persistently declared types,
like in CommandObjectMemory.
This decouples clang from CommandObjectMemory and decouples Plugins from
Commands in general.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62797
llvm-svn: 363183
Summary:
Previous patch (r360409) introduced the "symbol file unwind plan"
concept, but that plan wasn't used for unwinding yet. With this patch,
we start to consider the new plan as a possible strategy for both
synchronous and asynchronous unwinding. I also add a test that asserts
that unwinding via breakpad STACK CFI info works end-to-end.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, amccarth, markmentovai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61853
llvm-svn: 361618
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
Before this change we were overriding the launch info environment with
the target environment. This meant that the environment variables passed
to `process launch --environment <>` were lost. Instead of replacing the
environment, we should merge them.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61864
llvm-svn: 360612
Summary:
some unwind formats are specific to a single symbol file and so it does
not make sense for their parsing code live in the general Symbol library
(as is the case with eh_frame for instance). This is the case for the
unwind information in breakpad files, but the same will probably be true
for PDB unwind info (once we are able to parse that).
This patch adds the ability to fetch an unwind plan provided by a symbol
file plugin, as discussed in the RFC at
<http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2019-February/014703.html>.
I've kept the set of changes to a minimum, as there is no way to test
them until we have a symbol file which implements this API -- that is
comming in a follow-up patch, which will also implicitly test this
change.
The interesting part here is the introduction of the
"RegisterInfoResolver" interface. The reason for this is that breakpad
needs to be able to resolve register names (which are present as strings
in the file) into register enums so that it can construct the unwind
plan. This is normally done via the RegisterContext class, handing this
over to the SymbolFile plugin would mean that it has full access to the
debugged process, which is not something we want it to have. So instead,
I create a facade, which only provides the ability to query register
names, and hide the RegisterContext behind the facade.
Also note that this only adds the ability to dump the unwind plan
created by the symbol file plugin -- the plan is not used for unwinding
yet -- this will be added in a third patch, which will add additional
tests which makes sure the unwinding works as a whole.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg
Subscribers: markmentovai, amccarth, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61732
llvm-svn: 360409
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
You can only find out about this useful customization by browsing
the settings list output or the llvm.org web pages. Mention it
in the help for thread list, thread backtrace & _regex_bt commands
to make it more discoverable.
llvm-svn: 359752
This patch ensures that we honor the stop-command-source-on-error
setting from `command source`. The problem is that we didn't
differentiate between the boolean value being true or false, or not
being set. For the latter scenario, we should calculate the value in the
command interpreter based on the global options.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61406
llvm-svn: 359750
In r359354 a GetDebugger() method was added to the CommandObject class,
so that we didn't have to go through the command interpreter to obtain
the script interpreter. This patch simplifies other call sites where
m_interpreter.GetDebugger() was used, and replaces them with a shorter
call to the new method.
llvm-svn: 359373
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
Summary:
This argument was added back in 2010 (r118882) to support the ability to unwind
from functions whose eh_frame entry does not cover the entire range of
the function.
However, due to the caching happening in FuncUnwinders, this solution is
very fragile. FuncUnwinders will cache the plan it got from eh_frame
regardless of the value of the current_offset, so our ability to unwind
from a given function depended what was the value of "current_offset" the
first time that this function was called.
Furthermore, since the "image show-unwind" command did not know what's
the right offset to pass, this created an unfortunate situation where
"image show-unwind" would show no valid plans for a function, even
though they were available and being used.
In this patch I implement the feature slightly differently. Instead of
giving just a base address to the eh_frame unwinder, I give it the
entire range we are interested in. Then, I change the unwinder to return
the first plan that covers (even partially) that range. This way even a
partial plan will be returned, regardless of the address in the function
where we are stopped at.
This solution is still not 100% correct, as it will not handle a
function which is covered by two independent fde entries. However, I
don't expect anybody will write this kind of functions, and this wasn't
handled by the previous implementation either. If this is ever needed in
the future. The eh_frame unwinder can be extended to return "composite"
unwind plans created by merging sevelar fde entries.
I also create a test which triggers this scenario. As doing this is
virtually impossible without hand-written assembly, the test only works
on x86 linux.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60829
llvm-svn: 358964
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
Summary:
Within .lldbinit, regex commands can be structured as a list of substitutions over
multiple lines. It's possible that this is uninentional, but it works and has
benefits.
For example:
command regex <command-name>
s/pat1/repl1/
s/pat2/repl2/
...
I use this form of `command regex` in my `~/.lldbinit`, because it makes it
clearer to write and read compared to a single line definition, because
multiline substitutions don't need to be quoted, and are broken up one per line.
However, multiline definitions result in usage instructions being printed for
each use. The result is that every time I run `lldb`, I get a dozen or more
lines of noise. With this change, the instructions are only printed when
`command regex` is invoked interactively, or from a terminal, neither of which
are true when lldb is sourcing `~/.lldbinit`.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: jdoerfert, kastiglione, xiaobai, keith, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48752
llvm-svn: 355793
Inspired by Zachary's mail on lldb-dev, this seemed like low hanging
fruit. This patch breaks the circular dependency between commands and
expression.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59158
llvm-svn: 355762
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
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
This patch adds the necessary logic to capture and replay commands
entered into the command interpreter. A DataRecorder shadows the input
and writes its data to a know file. During replay this file is used as
the command interpreter's input.
It's possible to the command interpreter more than once, with a
different input source. We support this scenario by using multiple
buffers. The synchronization for this takes place at the SB layer, where
we create a new recorder every time the debugger input is changed.
During replay we use the corresponding buffer as input.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58564
llvm-svn: 355249
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
Given that we have a target named Symbols, one wonders why a
file named Symbols.cpp is not in this target. To be clear,
the functions exposed from this file are really focused on
*locating* a symbol file on a given host, which is where the
ambiguity comes in. However, it makes more sense conceptually
to be in the Symbols target. While some of the specific places
to search for symbol files might change depending on the Host,
this is not inherently true in the same way that, for example,
"accessing the file system" or "starting threads" is
fundamentally dependent on the Host.
PDBs, for example, recently became a reality on non-Windows platforms,
and it's theoretically possible that DSYMs could become a thing on non
MacOSX platforms (maybe in a remote debugging scenario). Other types of
symbol files, such as DWO, DWP, etc have never been tied to any Host
platform anyway.
After this patch, there is only one remaining dependency from
Host to Target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58730
llvm-svn: 355032
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
Summary:
This is a preparatory step to enable adding extra unwind strategies by
symbol file plugins. This has been discussed on the lldb-dev mailing
list: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2019-February/014703.html>.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg, espindola
Subscribers: lemo, emaste, lldb-commits, arichardson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58129
llvm-svn: 354033
The `ap` suffix is a remnant of lldb's former use of auto pointers,
before they got deprecated. Although all their uses were replaced by
unique pointers, some variables still carried the suffix.
In r353795 I removed another auto_ptr remnant, namely redundant calls to
::get for unique_pointers. Jim justly noted that this is a good
opportunity to clean up the variable names as well.
I went over all the changes to ensure my find-and-replace didn't have
any undesired side-effects. I hope I didn't miss any, but if you end up
at this commit doing a git blame on a weirdly named variable, please
know that the change was unintentional.
llvm-svn: 353912
Unlike std::make_unique, which is only available since C++14,
std::make_shared is available since C++11. Not only is std::make_shared
a lot more readable compared to ::reset(new), it also performs a single
heap allocation for the object and control block.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57990
llvm-svn: 353764
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
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 reapplies r350802, which was reverted because of issues with
parsing posix-style paths on windows hosts (and vice-versa). These have
since been fixed in r351328, and lldb should now recognise the path
style used in a dwarf compile unit correctly.
llvm-svn: 351435
The code in LLDB assumes that CompilerType and friends use the size 0
as a sentinel value to signal an error. This works for C++, where no
zero-sized type exists, but in many other programming languages
(including I believe C) types of size zero are possible and even
common. This is a particular pain point in swift-lldb, where extra
code exists to double-check that a type is *really* of size zero and
not an error at various locations.
To remedy this situation, this patch starts by converting
CompilerType::getBitSize() and getByteSize() to return an optional
result. To avoid wasting space, I hand-rolled my own optional data
type assuming that no type is larger than what fits into 63
bits. Follow-up patches would make similar changes to the ValueObject
hierarchy.
rdar://problem/47178964
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56688
llvm-svn: 351214
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
This reverts commit r350802 because the test fails on windows. This
happens because we treat the paths as windows paths even though they
have linux path separators in the asm file. That results in wrong paths
being computed (\tmp\tmp\a.c instead of /tmp/a.c).
Reverting until I can figure out what to do with this.
llvm-svn: 350810
Summary:
The motivation for this is being able to write tests for the upcoming
breakpad line table parser, but this could be useful for testing the
low-level workings of any line table format. Or simply for viewing the
line table information with more detail (the brief format doesn't
include any of the flags for end_of_prologue and similar).
I've also removed the load_addresses argument from the
DumpCompileUnitLineTable function, as it wasn't being used anywhere.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56315
llvm-svn: 350802
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
They both run the same command, and people get used to typing the shortest
string they can, so we should support alias info on shortened strings as well.
<rdar://problem/46859207>
llvm-svn: 349874
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
Prior to this change we would show the name of the section that a memory region belonged to but not its actual region name. Now we show this,. Added a test that reuses the regions-linux-map.dmp minidump file to test this and verify the correct region names for various memory regions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55854
llvm-svn: 349658
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:
This function was named such because in the case of MachO files, the
mach header is located at this address. However all (most?) usages of
this function were not interested in that fact, but the fact that this
address is used as the base address for expressing various relative
addresses in the object file.
For other object file formats, this name is not appropriate (and it's
probably the reason why this function was not implemented in these
classes). In the ELF case the ELF header will usually end up at this
address, but this is a result of the linker optimizing the file layout
and not a requirement of the spec. For COFF files, I believe the is no
header located at this address either.
Reviewers: clayborg, jasonmolenda, amccarth, lemo, stella.stamenova
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55422
llvm-svn: 348849
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
This patch changes the way the reproducer is initialized. Rather than
making changes at run time we now do everything at initialization time.
To make this happen we had to introduce initializer options and their SB
variant. This allows us to tell the initializer that we're running in
reproducer capture/replay mode.
Because of this change we also had to alter our testing strategy. We
cannot reinitialize LLDB when using the dotest infrastructure. Instead
we use lit and invoke two instances of the driver.
Another consequence is that we can no longer enable capture or replay
through commands. This was bound to go away form the beginning, but I
had something in mind where you could enable/disable specific providers.
However this seems like it adds very little value right now so the
corresponding commands were removed.
Finally this change also means you now have to control this through the
driver, for which I replaced --reproducer with --capture and --replay to
differentiate between the two modes.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55038
llvm-svn: 348152
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 I landed the initial reproducer framework I knew there were some
things that needed improvement. Rather than bundling it with a patch
that adds more functionality I split it off into this patch. I also
think the API is stable enough to add unit testing, which is included in
this patch as well.
Other improvements include:
- Refactor how we initialize the loader and generator.
- Improve naming consistency: capture and replay seems the least ambiguous.
- Index providers by name and make sure there's only one of each.
- Add convenience methods for creating and accessing providers.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54616
llvm-svn: 347716
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
After committing the initial reproducer feature I noticed a few small
issues which warranted addressing here. It fixes incorrect documentation
in the command object and extract some duplicated code into the debugger
object.
llvm-svn: 346919
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
This moves construction of data buffers into the FileSystem class. Like
some of the previous refactorings we don't translate the path yet
because the functionality hasn't been landed in LLVM yet.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54272
llvm-svn: 346598
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
This is useful for investigating the clang ast as you reconstruct
it via by parsing debug info. It can also be used to write tests
against.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54072
llvm-svn: 346149
This patch 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 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 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
For the reproducer feature I need to be able to export and import the
current LLDB configuration. To realize this I've extended the existing
functionality to print settings. With the help of a new formatting
option, we can now write the settings and their values to a file
structured as regular commands.
Concretely the functionality works as follows:
(lldb) settings export -f /path/to/file
This file contains a bunch of settings set commands, followed by the
setting's name and value.
...
settings set use-external-editor false
settings set use-color true
settings set auto-one-line-summaries true
settings set auto-indent true
...
You can import the settings again by either sourcing the file or using
the settings read command.
(lldb) settings read -f /path/to/file
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52651
llvm-svn: 345346
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
The -force option allows you to pass an empty value to settings set to
reset the value to its default. This means that the following operations
are equivalent:
settings set -f <setting>
settings clear <setting>
The motivation for this change is the ability to export and import
settings from LLDB. Because of the way the dumpers work, we don't know
whether a value is going to be the default or not. Hence we cannot use
settings clear and use settings set -f, potentially providing an empty
value.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52772
llvm-svn: 345207
This reverts commit r344647.
This causes build failures with [-Werror, -Wswitch]. Some cases where the newly
introduced enum value is not handled in particular are in:
lldb/source/Expression/REPL.cpp:350
lldb/source/Interpreter/CommandInterpreter.cpp:1529
(maybe there could be more)
As I don't understand lldb to make sure the likely trivial fixes are
correct and also as they might need additional tests, leaving to the
author to resolve.
llvm-svn: 344722
Before we returned an error that was not exposed in the SB API and no useful
error message. This change returns eExpressionProducedNoResult and an
appropriate error string.
<rdar://problem/44539514>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53309
llvm-svn: 344647
Summary:
Add settings to control command echoing:
```
(lldb) settings set interpreter.echo-commands true
(lldb) settings set interpreter.echo-comment-commands true
```
Both settings default to true, which keeps LLDB's existing behavior in non-interactive mode (echo all command inputs to the output).
So far the only way to change this behavior was the `--source-quietly` flag, which disables all output including evaluation results.
Now `echo-commands` allows to turn off echoing for commands, while evaluation results are still printed. No effect if `--source-quietly` was present.
`echo-comment-commands` allows to turn off echoing for commands in case they are pure comment lines. No effect if `echo-commands` is false.
Note that the behavior does not change immediately! The new settings take effect only with the next command source.
LLDB lit test are the main motivation for this feature. So far incoming `#CHECK` line have always been echoed to the output and so they could never fail. Now we can disable it in lit-lldb-init.
Todos: Finish test for this feature. Add to lit-lldb-init. Check for failing lit tests.
Reviewers: aprantl, jasonmolenda, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: friss, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52788
llvm-svn: 343859
When creating a target, lldb loads all dependent files (i.e. libs in
LC_LOAD_DYLIB for Mach-O). This can be confusing, especially when two
versions of the same library end up in the shared cache. It's possible
to change this behavior, by specifying target create -d <target> these
dependents are not loaded.
This patch changes the default behavior to only load dependent files
only when the target is an executable. When creating a target for a
library, it is now no longer necessary to pass -d. The user can still
override this behavior by specifying the -d option to change this
behavior.
rdar://problem/43721382
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51934
llvm-svn: 342634
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
Summary:
This patch adds a framework for adding descriptions to the command completions we provide.
It also adds descriptions for completed top-level commands so that we can test this code.
Completions are in general supposed to be displayed alongside the completion itself. The descriptions
can be used to provide additional information about the completion to the user. Examples for descriptions
are function signatures when completing function calls in the expression command or the binary name
when providing completion for a symbol.
There is still some boilerplate code from the old completion API left in LLDB (mostly because the respective
APIs are reused for non-completion related purposes, so the CompletionRequest doesn't make sense to be
used), so that's why I still had to change some function signatures. Also, as the old API only passes around a
list of matches, and the descriptions are for these functions just another list, I had to add some code that
essentially just ensures that both lists are always the same side (e.g. all the manual calls to
`descriptions->AddString(X)` below a `matches->AddString(Y)` call).
The initial command descriptions that come with this patch are just reusing the existing
short help that is already added in LLDB.
An example completion with descriptions looks like this:
```
(lldb) pl
Available completions:
platform -- Commands to manage and create platforms.
plugin -- Commands for managing LLDB plugins.
```
Reviewers: #lldb, jingham
Reviewed By: #lldb, jingham
Subscribers: jingham, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51175
llvm-svn: 342181
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
If you tried to complete somwthing like ~/., lldb would come up with a lot
of non-existent filenames by concatenating every exisitng file in the directory
with an initial '.'.
This was due to a workaround for an llvm::fs::path::filename behavior that
was not applied selectively enough.
llvm-svn: 341268
The patch was originally written before we had a CompletionRequest,
so it still used a StringList to pass back the completions to
the request.
llvm-svn: 341124
Summary:
This patch adds initial code completion support for the `expr` command.
We now have a completion handler in the expression CommandObject that
essentially just attempts to parse the given user expression with Clang with
an attached code completion consumer. We filter and prepare the
code completions provided by Clang and send them back to the completion
API.
The current completion is limited to variables that are in the current scope.
This includes local variables and all types used by local variables. We however
don't do any completion of symbols that are not used in the local scope (or
in some other way already in the ASTContext).
This is partly because there is not yet any code that manually searches for additiona
information in the debug information. Another cause is that for some reason the existing
code for loading these additional symbols when requested by Clang doesn't seem to work.
This will be fixed in a future patch.
Reviewers: jingham, teemperor
Reviewed By: teemperor
Subscribers: labath, aprantl, JDevlieghere, friss, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48465
llvm-svn: 341086
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
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
Summary:
We already have the same check directly before, so this code can never be
reached (as seen in the test coverage).
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50317
llvm-svn: 338976
Summary:
We currently allow any completion handler to read and manipulate the list of matches we
calculated so far. This leads to a few problems:
Firstly, a completion handler's logic can now depend on previously calculated results
by another handlers. No completion handler should have such an implicit dependency,
but the current API makes it likely that this could happen (or already happens). Especially
the fact that some completion handler deleted all previously calculated results can mess
things up right now.
Secondly, all completion handlers have knowledge about our internal data structures with
this API. This makes refactoring this internal data structure much harder than it should be.
Especially planned changes like the support of descriptions for completions are currently
giant patches because we have to refactor every single completion handler.
This patch narrows the contract the CompletionRequest has with the different handlers to:
1. A handler can suggest a completion.
2. A handler can ask how many suggestions we already have.
Point 2 obviously means we still have a dependency left between the different handlers, but
getting rid of this is too large to just append it to this patch.
Otherwise this patch just completely hides the internal StringList to the different handlers.
The CompletionRequest API now also ensures that the list of completions is unique and we
don't suggest the same value multiple times to the user. This property has been so far only
been ensured by the `Option` handler, but is now applied globally. This is part of this patch
as the OptionHandler is no longer able to implement this functionality itself.
Reviewers: jingham, davide, labath
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49322
llvm-svn: 338151
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
Summary:
As suggested in D48796, this patch replaces even more internal calls that were using the old
completion API style with a single CompletionRequest. In some cases we also pass an option
vector/index, but as we don't always have this information, it currently is not part of the
CompletionRequest class.
The constructor of the CompletionRequest is now also more sensible. You only pass the
user input, cursor position and your list of matches to the request and the rest will be
inferred (using the same code we used before to calculate this). You also have to pass these
match window parameters to it, even though they are unused right now.
The patch shouldn't change any behavior.
Reviewers: jingham
Reviewed By: jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48976
llvm-svn: 337031
Summary:
This patch gets rid of the C-string parameter in the RawCommandObject::DoExecute function,
making the code simpler and less memory unsafe.
There seems to be a assumption in some command objects that this parameter could be a nullptr,
but from what I can see the rest of the API doesn't actually allow this (and other command
objects and related code pieces dereference this parameter without any checks).
Especially CommandObjectRegexCommand has error handling code for a nullptr that is now gone.
Reviewers: davide, jingham, teemperor
Reviewed By: teemperor
Subscribers: jingham, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49207
llvm-svn: 336955
Summary:
This patch adds the possibility to specify an exit code when calling quit.
We accept any int, even though it depends on the user what happens if the int is
out of the range of what the operating system supports as exit codes.
Fixes rdar://problem/38452312
Reviewers: davide, jingham, clayborg
Reviewed By: jingham
Subscribers: clayborg, jingham, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48659
llvm-svn: 336824
Summary:
A subset of the LLDB commands follows this command line interface style:
<command name> [arguments] -- <string suffix>
The parsing code for this interface has been so far been duplicated into the different
command objects which makes it hard to maintain and reuse elsewhere.
This patches improves the situation by adding a OptionsWithRaw class that centralizes
the parsing logic and allows easier testing. The different commands now just call this class to
extract the arguments and the raw suffix from the provided user input.
Reviewers: jingham
Reviewed By: jingham
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49106
llvm-svn: 336723
Summary:
This patch refactors the internal completion API. It now takes (as far as possible) a single
CompletionRequest object instead o half a dozen in/out/in-out parameters. The CompletionRequest
contains a common superset of the different parameters as far as it makes sense. This includes
the raw command line string and raw cursor position, which should make the `expr` command
possible to implement (at least without hacks that reconstruct the command line from the args).
This patch is not intended to change the observable behavior of lldb in any way. It's also as
minimal as possible and doesn't attempt to fix all the problems the API has.
Some Q&A:
Q: Why is this not fixing all the problems in the completion API?
A: Because is a blocker for the expr command completion which I want to get in ASAP. This is the
smallest patch that unblocks the expr completion patch and which allows trivial refactoring in the future.
The patch also doesn't really change the internal information flow in the API, so that hopefully
saves us from ever having to revert and resubmit this humongous patch.
Q: Can we merge all the copy-pasted code in the completion methods
(like computing the current incomplete arg) into CompletionRequest class?
A: Yes, but it's out of scope for this patch.
Q: Why the `word_complete = request.GetWordComplete(); ... ` pattern?
A: I don't want to add a getter that returns a reference to the internal integer. So we have
to use a temporary variable and the Getter/Setter instead. We don't throw exceptions
from what I can tell, so the behavior doesn't change.
Q: Why are we not owning the list of matches?
A: Because that's how the previous API works. But that should be fixed too (in another patch).
Q: Can we make the constructor simpler and compute some of the values from the plain command?
A: I think this works, but I rather want to have this in a follow up commit. Especially when making nested
request it's a bit awkward that the parsed arguments behave as both input/output (as we should in theory
propagate the changes on the nested request back to the parent request if we don't want to change the
behavior too much).
Q: Can't we pass one const request object and then just return another result object instead of mixing
them together in one in/out parameter?
A: It's hard to get keep the same behavior with that pattern, but I think we can also get a nice API with just
a single request object. If we make all input parameters read-only, we have a clear separation between what
is actually an input and what an output parameter (and hopefully we get rid of the in-out parameters).
Q: Can we throw out the 'match' variables that are not implemented according to the comment?
A: We currently just forward them as in the old code to the different methods, even though I think
they are really not used. We can easily remove and readd them once every single completion method just
takes a CompletionRequest, but for now I prefer NFC behavior from the perspective of the API user.
Reviewers: davide, jingham, labath
Reviewed By: jingham
Subscribers: mgorny, friss, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48796
llvm-svn: 336146
The code was creating a StringRef to a temporary std::string. The
solution is to just drop the .str() from the original StringRef.
This manifested it self as the new TestCompletions test failing in some
configurations.
llvm-svn: 335960
We didn't add the remaining path behind the '~' to the completion string,
causing it to just complete directories inside the user home directory. This
patch just adds the directory of the remaining path if there is one.
Fixes rdar://problem/40147002
llvm-svn: 334978
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:
As discussed in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37317,
FindGlobalVariables does not properly handle the case where
append=false. As this doesn't seem to be used in the tree, this patch
removes the parameter entirely.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham, labath
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits, kubamracek, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46885
Patch by Tom Tromey <ttromey@mozilla.com>.
llvm-svn: 333639
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
This change adds support for two types of Minidump CodeView records:
PDB70 (reference: https://crashpad.chromium.org/doxygen/structcrashpad_1_1CodeViewRecordPDB70.html)
This is by far the most common record type.
ELF BuildID (found in Breakpad/Crashpad generated minidumps)
This would set a proper UUID for placeholder modules, in turn enabling
an accurate match with local module images.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46292
llvm-svn: 331394
This is intended as a clean up after the big clang-format commit
(r280751), which unfortunately resulted in many of the comment
paragraphs in LLDB being very hard to read.
FYI, the script I used was:
import textwrap
import commands
import os
import sys
import re
tmp = "%s.tmp"%sys.argv[1]
out = open(tmp, "w+")
with open(sys.argv[1], "r") as f:
header = ""
text = ""
comment = re.compile(r'^( *//) ([^ ].*)$')
special = re.compile(r'^((([A-Z]+[: ])|([0-9]+ )).*)|(.*;)$')
for line in f:
match = comment.match(line)
if match and not special.match(match.group(2)):
# skip intentionally short comments.
if not text and len(match.group(2)) < 40:
out.write(line)
continue
if text:
text += " " + match.group(2)
else:
header = match.group(1)
text = match.group(2)
continue
if text:
filled = textwrap.wrap(text, width=(78-len(header)),
break_long_words=False)
for l in filled:
out.write(header+" "+l+'\n')
text = ""
out.write(line)
os.rename(tmp, sys.argv[1])
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46144
llvm-svn: 331197
Normally, LLDB is creating a high-fidelity representation of a live
process, including a list of modules and sections, with the
associated memory address ranges. In order to build the module and
section map LLDB tries to locate the local module image (object file)
and will parse it.
This does not work for postmortem debugging scenarios where the crash
dump (minidump in this case) was captured on a different machine.
Fortunately the minidump format encodes enough information about
each module's memory range to allow us to create placeholder modules.
This enables most LLDB functionality involving address-to-module
translations.
Also, we may want to completly disable the search for matching
local object files if we load minidumps unless we can prove that the
local image matches the one from the crash origin.
(not part of this change, see: llvm.org/pr35193)
Example: Identify the module from a stack frame PC:
Before:
thread #1, stop reason = Exception 0xc0000005 encountered at address 0x164d14
frame #0: 0x00164d14
frame #1: 0x00167c79
frame #2: 0x00167e6d
frame #3: 0x7510336a
frame #4: 0x77759882
frame #5: 0x77759855
After:
thread #1, stop reason = Exception 0xc0000005 encountered at address 0x164d14
frame #0: 0x00164d14 C:\Users\amccarth\Documents\Visual Studio 2013\Projects\fizzbuzz\Debug\fizzbuzz.exe
frame #1: 0x00167c79 C:\Users\amccarth\Documents\Visual Studio 2013\Projects\fizzbuzz\Debug\fizzbuzz.exe
frame #2: 0x00167e6d C:\Users\amccarth\Documents\Visual Studio 2013\Projects\fizzbuzz\Debug\fizzbuzz.exe
frame #3: 0x7510336a C:\Windows\SysWOW64\kernel32.dll
frame #4: 0x77759882 C:\Windows\SysWOW64\ntdll.dll
frame #5: 0x77759855 C:\Windows\SysWOW64\ntdll.dll
Example: target modules list
Before:
error: the target has no associated executable images
After:
[ 0] C:\Windows\System32\MSVCP120D.dll
[ 1] C:\Windows\SysWOW64\kernel32.dll
[ 2] C:\Users\amccarth\Documents\Visual Studio 2013\Projects\fizzbuzz\Debug\fizzbuzz.exe
[ 3] C:\Windows\System32\MSVCR120D.dll
[ 4] C:\Windows\SysWOW64\KERNELBASE.dll
[ 5] C:\Windows\SysWOW64\ntdll.dll
NOTE: the minidump format also includes the debug info GUID, so we can
fill-in the module UUID from it, but this part was excluded from this change
to keep the changes simple (the LLDB UUID is hardcoded to be either 16 or
20 bytes, while the CodeView GUIDs are normally 24 bytes)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45700
llvm-svn: 330302
Summary:
The Args class is used in plenty of places besides the command
interpreter (e.g., anything requiring an argc+argv combo, such as when
launching a process), so it needs to be in a lower layer. Now that the
class has no external dependencies, it can be moved down to the Utility
module.
This removes the last (direct) dependency from the Host module to
Interpreter, so I remove the Interpreter module from Host's dependency
list.
Reviewers: zturner, jingham, davide
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45480
llvm-svn: 330200
This allows us to collect useful metrics about lldb debugging sessions.
I thought that an example would be better than a thousand words:
Process 19705 stopped
* thread #1, queue = 'com.apple.main-thread', stop reason = step in
frame #0: 0x0000000100000fb4 blah`main at blah.c:3
1 int main(void) {
2 int a = 6;
-> 3 return 0;
4 }
(lldb) statistics enable
(lldb) frame var a
(int) a = 6
(lldb) expr a
(int) $1 = 6
(lldb) statistics disable
(lldb) statistics dump
Number of expr evaluation successes : 1
Number of expr evaluation failures : 0
Number of frame var successes : 1
Number of frame var failures : 0
Future improvements might include:
1. Passing a file, or implementing categories. The way this patch has
been implemented is generic enough to allow this to be extended
easily without breaking the grammar.
2. Adding an SBAPI and Python API for use in scripts.
Thanks to Jim Ingham for discussing the design with me.
<rdar://problem/36555975>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45547
llvm-svn: 330043
Summary:
The idea behind this is to move the functionality which depend on other lldb
classes into a separate class. This way, the Args class can be turned
into a lightweight arc+argv wrapper and moved into the lower lldb
layers.
Reviewers: jingham, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44306
llvm-svn: 329677
This one will be used to print statistics about lldb sessions
(including, e.g. number of expression evaluation succeeded or
failed). I decided to commit the skeleton first so that we have
a clean reference on how a command should be implemented.
My future commits are going to populate this command and test
it.
<rdar://problem/36555975>
llvm-svn: 328378
It wasn't even registered.
(lldb) apropos args
No commands found pertaining to 'args'. Try 'help' to see
a complete list of debugger commands.
llvm-svn: 328370
The difference between this and the previous patch is that now we use
ELF physical addresses only for loading objects into the target (and the
rest of the module load address logic still uses virtual addresses).
Summary:
When writing an object file over gdb-remote, use the vFlashErase, vFlashWrite, and vFlashDone commands if the write address is in a flash memory region. A bare metal target may have this kind of setup.
- Update ObjectFileELF to set load addresses using physical addresses. A typical case may be a data section with a physical address in ROM and a virtual address in RAM, which should be loaded to the ROM address.
- Add support for querying the target's qXfer:memory-map, which contains information about flash memory regions, leveraging MemoryRegionInfo data structures with minor modifications
- Update ProcessGDBRemote to use vFlash commands in DoWriteMemory when the target address is in a flash region
Original discussion at http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2018-January/013093.html
Reviewers: clayborg, labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: llvm-commits, arichardson, emaste, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42145
Patch by Owen Shaw <llvm@owenpshaw.net>.
llvm-svn: 327970
Summary:
The args class is used in plenty of places (a lot of them in the lower lldb
layers) for representing a list of arguments, and most of these places don't
care about option parsing. Moving the option parsing out of the class removes
the largest external dependency (there are a couple more, but these are in
static functions), and brings us closer to being able to move it to the
Utility module).
The new home for these functions is the Options class, which was already used
as an argument to the parse calls, so this just inverts the dependency between
the two.
The functions are themselves are mainly just copied -- the biggest functional
change I've made to them is to avoid modifying the input Args argument (getopt
likes to permute the argument vector), as it was weird to have another class
reorder the entries in Args class. So now the functions don't modify the input
arguments, and (for those where it makes sense) return a new Args vector
instead. I've also made the addition of a "fake arg0" (required for getopt
compatibility) an implementation detail rather than a part of interface.
While doing that I noticed that ParseForCompletion function was recording the
option indexes in the shuffled vector, but then the consumer was looking up the
entries in the unshuffled one. This manifested itself as us not being able to
complete "watchpoint set variable foo --" (because getopt would move "foo" to
the end). Surprisingly all other completions (e.g. "watchpoint set variable foo
--w") were not affected by this. However, I couldn't find a comprehensive test
for command argument completion, so I consolidated the existing tests and added
a bunch of new ones.
Reviewers: davide, jingham, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43837
llvm-svn: 327110
Summary:
We copy the local variable `Resolved` into `Storage` to keep it around. However, we then still let the `SearchDir` ref point to `Resolved` which then is used to access the already freed memory later on. With this patch we point to `Storage` which doesn't get deleted after the current scope exits.
Discovered by memory sanitizer in the CompletionTest.DirCompletionUsername test.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42346
llvm-svn: 323082
Summary:
There was some confusion in the code about how to represent process
environment. Most of the code (ab)used the Args class for this purpose,
but some of it used a more basic StringList class instead. In either
case, the fact that the underlying abstraction did not provide primitive
operations for the typical environment operations meant that even a
simple operation like checking for an environment variable value was
several lines of code.
This patch adds a separate Environment class, which is essentialy a
llvm::StringMap<std::string> in disguise. To standard StringMap
functionality, it adds a couple of new functions, which are specific to
the environment use case:
- (most important) envp conversion for passing into execve() and likes.
Instead of trying to maintain a constantly up-to-date envp view, it
provides a function which creates a envp view on demand, with the
expectation that this will be called as the very last thing before
handing the value to the system function.
- insert(StringRef KeyEqValue) - splits KeyEqValue into (key, value)
pair and inserts it into the environment map.
- compose(value_type KeyValue) - takes a map entry and converts in back
into "KEY=VALUE" representation.
With this interface most of the environment-manipulating code becomes
one-liners. The only tricky part was maintaining compatibility in
SBLaunchInfo, which expects that the environment entries are accessible
by index and that the returned const char* is backed by the launch info
object (random access into maps is hard and the map stores the entry in
a deconstructed form, so we cannot just return a .c_str() value). To
solve this, I have the SBLaunchInfo convert the environment into the
"envp" form, and use it to answer the environment queries. Extra code is
added to make sure the envp version is always in sync.
(This also improves the layering situation as Args was in the Interpreter module
whereas Environment is in Utility.)
Reviewers: zturner, davide, jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41359
llvm-svn: 322174
This was a temporary thing, until llvm has proper support for formatting
time. That time has come, so we can remove the relevant code. There
should be no change in the format of the time.
llvm-svn: 319048
The rationale here is that ArchSpec is used throughout the codebase,
including in places which should not depend on the rest of the code in
the Core module.
This commit touches many files, but most of it is just renaming of
#include lines. In a couple of cases, I removed the #include ArchSpec
line altogether, as the file was not using it. In one or two places,
this necessitated adding other #includes like lldb-private-defines.h.
llvm-svn: 318048
Summary:
ArchSpec::SetTriple was taking a Platform as an argument, and used it to
fill in missing pieces of the specified triple. I invert the dependency
by moving this code to other classes. For this purpose, I've created
three new functions.
- HostInfo::GetAugmentedArchSpec: fills in the triple using the host
platform (this used to be implemented by passing a null platform
pointer). By putting this code in the Host module, we can provide a
way to anyone who does not have a platform instance (lldb-server) an
easy way to get Host data.
- Platform::GetAugmentedArchSpec: if you have a platform instance, you
can call this to let it fill in the triple.
- static Platform::GetAugmentedArchSpec: implements the "if platform ==
0 then use_host() else use_platform()" part.
Reviewers: zturner, jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: mgorny, javed.absar, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39387
llvm-svn: 316987
This allows clients to avoid an unnecessary fs::status() call on each
directory entry. Because the information returned by FindFirstFileEx
is a subset of the information returned by a regular status() call,
I needed to extract a base class from file_status that contains only
that information.
On my machine, this reduces the time required to enumerate a ThinLTO
cache directory containing 520k files from almost 4 minutes to less
than 2 seconds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38716
llvm-svn: 315378
The core of this change is the new CommandInterpreter::m_command_state,
which models the state transitions for interactive commands, including
an "interrupted" state transition.
In general, command interruption requires cooperation from the code
executing the command, which needs to poll for interruption requests
through CommandInterpreter::WasInterrupted().
CommandInterpreter::PrintCommandOutput() implements an optionally
interruptible printing of the command output, which for large outputs
was likely the longest blocking part.
(ex. target modules dump symtab on a complex binary could take 10+ minutes)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37923
llvm-svn: 315037
The core of this change is the new CommandInterpreter::m_command_state, which
models the state transitions for interactive commands, including an
"interrupted" state transition.
In general, command interruption requires cooperation from the code executing
the command, which needs to poll for interruption requests through
CommandInterpreter::WasInterrupted().
CommandInterpreter::PrintCommandOutput() implements an optionally
interruptible printing of the command output, which for large outputs was
likely the longest blocking part. (ex. target modules dump symtab on a
complex binary could take 10+ minutes)
patch by lemo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37923
llvm-svn: 313904
The main change is to avoid setting the process state as running when
debugging core/minidumps (details in the bug). Also included a few small,
related fixes around how the errors propagate in this case.
Fixed the FreeBSD/Windows break: the intention was to keep
Process::WillResume() and Process::DoResume() "in-sync", but this had the
unfortunate consequence of breaking Process sub-classes which don't override
WillResume().
The safer approach is to keep Process::WillResume() untouched and only
override it in the minidump and core implementations.
patch by lemo
Bug: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34532
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37651
llvm-svn: 313655
When introduced, breakpoint names were just tags that you could
apply to breakpoints that would allow you to refer to a breakpoint
when you couldn't capture the ID, or to refer to a collection of
breakpoints.
This change makes the names independent holders of breakpoint options
that you can then apply to breakpoints when you add the name to the
breakpoint. It adds the "breakpoint name configure" command to set
up or reconfigure breakpoint names. There is also full support for
then in the SB API, including a new SBBreakpointName class.
The connection between the name and the breakpoints
sharing the name remains live, so if you reconfigure the name, all the
breakpoint options all change as well. This allows a quick way
to share complex breakpoint behavior among a bunch of breakpoints, and
a convenient way to iterate on the set.
You can also create a name from a breakpoint, allowing a quick way
to copy options from one breakpoint to another.
I also added the ability to make hidden and delete/disable protected
names. When applied to a breakpoint, you will only be able to list,
delete or disable that breakpoint if you refer to it explicitly by ID.
This feature will allow GUI's that need to use breakpoints for their
own purposes to keep their breakpoints from getting accidentally
disabled or deleted.
<rdar://problem/22094452>
llvm-svn: 313292
The main change is to avoid setting the process state as running when
debugging core/minidumps (details in the bug).
Also included a few small, related fixes around how the errors propagate in
this case.
patch by lemo
Bug: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34532
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37651
llvm-svn: 313210
You can get a breakpoint to auto-continue by adding "continue"
as a command, but that has the disadvantage that if you hit two
breakpoints simultaneously, the continue will force the process
to continue, and maybe even forstalling the commands on the other.
The auto-continue flag means the breakpoints can negotiate about
whether to stop.
Writing tests, I wanted to supply some commands when I made the
breakpoints, so I also added that ability.
llvm-svn: 309969
When an option was set at on a location, I was just copying the whole option set
to the location, and letting it shadow the breakpoint options. That was wrong since
it meant changes to unrelated options on the breakpoint would no longer take on this
location. I added a mask of set options and use that for option propagation.
I also added a "location" property to breakpoints, and added SBBreakpointLocation.{G,S}etCommandLineCommands
since I wanted to use them to write some more test cases.
<rdar://problem/24397798>
llvm-svn: 309772
Now -shlib flag can be provided alongside with names of symbols files:
(lldb) target symbols add --shlib stripper-lib.so unstripper-lib.so
This is helpful when default matching mechanisms by name and UUID
can't find a module, and the user needs to explicitly specify
which module the given symbol file belongs to.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35607
llvm-svn: 308933
Summary:
The classes have no dependencies, and they are used both by lldb and
lldb-server, so it makes sense for them to live in the lowest layers.
Reviewers: zturner, jingham
Subscribers: emaste, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34746
llvm-svn: 306682
Summary:
This is a beefed-up version of D33504, which adds support for dwarf 4
debug_frame section format.
The main difference here is that the decision whether to use eh_frame or
debug_frame is done on a per-function basis instead of per-object file.
This is necessary because one module can contain both sections (for
example, the start files added by the linker will typically pull in
eh_frame), but we want to be able to access both, for maximum
information.
I also add unit test for parsing various CFI formats (eh_frame,
debug_frame v3 and debug_frame v4).
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg
Subscribers: mgorny, aprantl, abidh, lldb-commits, tatyana-krasnukha
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34613
llvm-svn: 306397
This patch introduces a new thread backtrace command "unique".
The command is based off of "thread backtrace all" but will instead
find all threads which share matching call stacks and de-duplicate
their output, listing call stack and all the threads which share it.
This is especially useful for apps which use thread/task pools
sitting around waiting for work and cause excessive duplicate output.
I needed this behavior recently when debugging a core with 700+ threads.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33426
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Patch by Brian Gianforcaro <b.gianfo@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 305197
strerror is not thread-safe. llvm's StrError tries hard to retrieve the
string in a thread-safe way and falls back to strerror only if it does
not have another way.
llvm-svn: 304795
During some cleanup the test for whether the thread plan
accepted an iteration count was reversed, so we give a
warning when it will actually work, and don't when it won't.
<rdar://problem/32379280>
llvm-svn: 303832
The Timer destructor would grab a global mutex in order to update
execution time. Add a class to define a category once, statically; the
class adds itself to an atomic singly linked list, and thus subsequent
updates only need to use an atomic rather than grab a lock and perform a
hashtable lookup.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32823
Patch by Scott Smith <scott.smith@purestorage.com>.
llvm-svn: 303058
This renames the LLDB error class to Status, as discussed
on the lldb-dev mailing list.
A change of this magnitude cannot easily be done without
find and replace, but that has potential to catch unwanted
occurrences of common strings such as "Error". Every effort
was made to find all the obvious things such as the word "Error"
appearing in a string, etc, but it's possible there are still
some lingering occurences left around. Hopefully nothing too
serious.
llvm-svn: 302872
r285226 dropped the code that did these checks. I am pretty
sure that was inadvertent, so I added that back in and added
a test for it.
<rdar://problem/31661252>
llvm-svn: 300564
This adjusts header file includes for headers and source files
in Core. In doing so, one dependency cycle is eliminated
because all the includes from Core to that project were dead
includes anyway. In places where some files in other projects
were only compiling due to a transitive include from another
header, fixups have been made so that those files also include
the header they need. Tested on Windows and Linux, and plan
to address failures on OSX and FreeBSD after watching the
bots.
llvm-svn: 299714
Previously which path syntax we supported dependend on what
platform we were compiling LLVM on. While this is normally
desirable, there are situations where we need to be able to
handle a path that we know was generated on a remote host.
Remote debugging, for example, or parsing debug info.
99% of the code in LLVM for handling paths was platform
agnostic and literally just a few branches were gated behind
pre-processor checks, so this changes those sites to use
runtime checks instead, and adds a flag to every path
API that allows one to override the host native syntax.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30858
llvm-svn: 298004
Summary:
previously we switched to llvm streams for log output, this completes
the switch for the error streams.
I also clean up the includes and remove the unused argument from
DisableAllLogChannels().
This required adding a bit of boiler plate to convert the output in the
command interpreter, but that should go away when we switch command
results to use llvm streams as well.
Reviewers: zturner, eugene
Subscribers: lldb-commits, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30894
llvm-svn: 297812
FileSpec::EnumerateDirectory has a bunch of platform-specific
gunk in it for posix and non-posix platforms. We can get rid
of all this by using LLVM's easy-to-use directory iterators.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30807
llvm-svn: 297598
This reverts commit a6a29374662716710f80c8ece96629751697841e.
It has a few compilation failures that I don't have time to fix
at the moment.
llvm-svn: 297589
There were a couple of problems with this function on Windows. Different
separators and differences in how tilde expressions are resolved for
starters, but in addition there was no clear indication of what the
function's inputs or outputs were supposed to be, and there were no tests
to demonstrate its use.
To more easily paper over the differences between Windows paths,
non-Windows paths, and tilde expressions, I've ported this function to use
LLVM-based directory iteration (in fact, I would like to eliminate all of
LLDB's directory iteration code entirely since LLVM's is cleaner / more
efficient (i.e. it invokes fewer stat calls)). and llvm's portable path
manipulation library.
Since file and directory completion assumes you are referring to files and
directories on your local machine, it's safe to assume the path syntax
properties of the host in doing so, so LLVM's APIs are perfect for this.
I've also added a fairly robust set of unit tests. Since you can't really
predict what users will be on your machine, or what their home directories
will be, I added an interface called TildeExpressionResolver, and in the
unit test I've mocked up a fake implementation that acts like a unix
password database. This allows us to configure some fake users and home
directories in the test, so we can exercise all of those hard-to-test
codepaths that normally otherwise depend on the host.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30789
llvm-svn: 297585
This was originall reverted due to some test failures in
ModuleCache and TestCompDirSymlink. These issues have all
been resolved and the code now passes all tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30698
llvm-svn: 297300
this reverts r297116 because it breaks the unittests and
TestCompDirSymlink. The ModuleCache unit test is trivially fixable, but
the CompDirSymlink failure is a symptom of a deeper problem: llvm's stat
functionality is not a drop-in replacement for lldb's. The former is
based on stat(2) (which does symlink resolution), while the latter is
based on lstat(2) (which does not).
This also reverts subsequent build fixes (r297128, r297120, 297117) and
r297119 (Remove FileSpec dependency on FileSystem) which builds on top
of this.
llvm-svn: 297139
This deletes LLDB's FileType enumeration and replaces all
users, and all calls to functions that check whether a file
exists etc with corresponding calls to LLVM.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30624
llvm-svn: 297116
This functionality is subsumed by DataBufferLLVM, which is
also more efficient since it will try to mmap. However, we
don't yet support mmaping writable private sections, and in
some cases we were using ReadFileContents and then modifying
the buffer. To address that I've added a flag to the
DataBufferLLVM methods that allow you to map privately, which
disables the mmaping path entirely. Eventually we should teach
DataBufferLLVM to use mmap with writable private, but that is
orthogonal to this effort.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30622
llvm-svn: 297095
In an effort to move the various DataBuffer / DataExtractor
classes from Core -> Utility, we have to separate the low-level
functionality from the higher level functionality. Only a
few functions required anything other than reading/writing
raw bytes, so those functions are separated out into a
more appropriate area. Specifically, Dump() and DumpHexBytes()
are moved into free functions in Core/DumpDataExtractor.cpp,
and GetGNUEHPointer is moved into a static function in the
only file that it's referenced from.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30560
llvm-svn: 296910
All references to Host and Core have been removed, so this
class can now safely be lowered into Utility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30559
llvm-svn: 296909
MSVC (at least the version I am using) does not want to implicitly
capture a const bool variable. Move it into the lambda, as it is not
used outside anyway.
llvm-svn: 296738
Summary:
Use StringRef and ArrayRef where possible. This adds an accessor to the
Args class to get a view of the arguments as ArrayRef<const char *>.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30402
llvm-svn: 296592
Summary:
I originally set out to move the NameMatches closer to the relevant
function and add some unit tests. However, in the process I've found a
couple of bugs in the implementation:
- the early exits where not always correct:
- (test==pattern) does not mean the match will always suceed because
of regular expressions
- pattern.empty() does not mean the match will fail because the "" is
a valid prefix of any string
So I cleaned up those and added some tests. The only tricky part here
was that regcomp() implementation on darwin did not recognise the empty
string as a regular expression and returned an REG_EMPTY error instead.
The simples fix here seemed to be to replace the empty expression with
an equivalent non-empty one.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30094
llvm-svn: 295651
Changes wrt. previous version:
- add #include <atomic>: fix build on windows
- add extra {} around the string literals used to initialize
llvm::StringLiteral: fix gcc build
llvm-svn: 295442
Summary:
We currently have two log channel registration mechanisms. One uses a
set of function pointers and the other one is based on the
PluginManager.
The PluginManager dependency is unfortunate, as logging
is also used in lldb-server, and the PluginManager pulls in a lot of
classes which are not used in lldb-server.
Both approach have the problem that they leave too much to do for the
user, and so the individual log channels end up reimplementing command
line argument parsing, category listing, etc.
Here, I replace the PluginManager-based approach with a one. The new API
is more declarative, so the user only needs to specify the list of list
of channels, their descriptions, etc., and all the common tasks like
enabling/disabling categories are hadled by common code. I migrate the
LogChannelDWARF (only user of the PluginManager method) to the new API.
In the follow-up commits I'll replace the other channels with something
similar.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner, beanz
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29895
llvm-svn: 295190
Summary:
We've had two ways to print a "debug" log message.
- Log::GetDebug() was testing a Stream flag which was never set.
- Log::Debug() was checking for the presence of "log enable --debug"
flag.
Given that these two were used very rarely and we already have a
different way to specify "I want a more verbose log", I propose to remove
these two functions and migrate the callers to LLDB_LOGV. This commit
does that.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29823
llvm-svn: 294939
CommandObjectVersion.cpp calls lldb_private::GetVersion (present in lldbBase).
This should fix the unittest link on windows. I am not sure why is this not
present on other platforms -- my guess is that there lldbBase is included in
the link through some other dependency chain.
llvm-svn: 294549
Summary:
The std::call_once implementation in libstdc++ has problems on few systems: NetBSD, OpenBSD and Linux PPC. LLVM ships with a homegrown implementation llvm::call_once to help on these platforms.
This change is required in the NetBSD LLDB port. std::call_once with libstdc++ results with crashing the debugger.
Sponsored by <The NetBSD Foundation>
Reviewers: labath, joerg, emaste, mehdi_amini, clayborg
Reviewed By: labath, clayborg
Subscribers: #lldb
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29288
llvm-svn: 294202
This moves the following classes from Core -> Utility.
ConstString
Error
RegularExpression
Stream
StreamString
The goal here is to get lldbUtility into a state where it has
no dependendencies except on itself and LLVM, so it can be the
starting point at which to start untangling LLDB's dependencies.
These are all low level and very widely used classes, and
previously lldbUtility had dependencies up to lldbCore in order
to use these classes. So moving then down to lldbUtility makes
sense from both the short term and long term perspective in
solving this problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29427
llvm-svn: 293941
Summary:
This patch adds accurate dependency specifications to the mail LLDB libraries and tools.
In all cases except lldb-server, these dependencies are added in addition to existing dependencies (making this low risk), and I performed some code cleanup along the way.
For lldb-server I've cleaned up the LLVM dependencies down to just the minimum actually required. This is more than lldb-server actually directly references, and I've left a todo in the code to clean that up.
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits, danalbert, srhines, ki.stfu, mgorny, jgosnell
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29333
llvm-svn: 293686
Summary: This commit adds an option to set PC to the entry point of the file loaded using "target module load" command. In D28804, Greg asked me to separate this part under a different option.
Reviewers: clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28944
llvm-svn: 292989
For bare-metal targets, lldb was missing a command like 'load' in gdb
which can be used to create executable image on the target. This was
discussed in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2016-December/011752.html
This commits adds an option to "target module load" command to provide
that functionality. It does not set the PC to entry address which will
be done separately.
Reviewed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D28804
llvm-svn: 292499
This adds the LLDB_LOG macro, which enables one to write more succinct log
statements.
if (log)
log->Printf("log something: %d", var);
becomes
LLDB_LOG(log, "log something: {0}, var);
The macro still internally does the "if(log)" dance, so the arguments are only
evaluated if logging is enabled, meaning it has the same overhead as the
previous syntax.
Additionally, the log statements will be automatically prefixed with the file
and function generating the log (if the corresponding new argument to the "log
enable" command is enabled), so one does not need to manually specify this in
the log statement.
It also uses the new llvm formatv syntax, which means we don't have to worry
about PRIx64 macros and similar, and we can log complex object (llvm::StringRef,
lldb_private::Error, ...) more easily.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27459
llvm-svn: 292360