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
Summary: DW_OP_GNU_addr_index has been renamed as DW_OP_addrx in the standard. clang produces DW_OP_addrx tags and with this change lldb starts to process them.
Reviewers: aprantl, jingham, davide, clayborg, serge-sans-paille
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: jdoerfert, dblaikie, labath, shafik, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59004
llvm-svn: 355629
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
stored relative to VFRAME
Summary:
This patch makes LLDB able to retrieve proper values for function arguments and
local variables stored in PDB relative to VFRAME register.
Patch contains retrieval of corresponding FPO table entries from PDB and a
generic translator from FPO programs to DWARF expressions to get correct VFRAME
value.
Patch also improves variables-locations.test and makes this test passable on
x86.
Patch By: leonid.mashinsky
Reviewers: zturner, asmith, stella.stamenova, aleksandr.urakov
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: arphaman, labath, mgorny, aprantl, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55122
llvm-svn: 352845
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 patch simplifies boolean expressions acorss LLDB. It was generated
using clang-tidy with the following command:
run-clang-tidy.py -checks='-*,readability-simplify-boolean-expr' -format -fix $PWD
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55584
llvm-svn: 349215
This patch removes the comments grouping header includes. They were
added after running IWYU over the LLDB codebase. However they add little
value, are often outdates and burdensome to maintain.
llvm-svn: 346626
Currently, we always parse the length field of DW_LLE_startx_length entry as U32.
That is correct for pre-standard definition:
https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/DebugFission - "A start/length entry contains one unsigned LEB128 number
and a 4-byte unsigned value (as would be represented by the form code DW_FORM_const4u). The first
number is an index into the .debug_addr section that selects the beginning offset, and the second
number is the length of the range. ")
But DWARF v5 says: "This is a form of bounded location description that has two unsigned ULEB operands.
The first value is an address index (into the .debug_addr section) that indicates the beginning of the address
range over which the location is valid. The second value is the length of the range."
Fortunately, we can easily handle the difference. No test case because it seems impossible to test
until we will be ready to use DWARF v5 in tests that need to run the executables.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53646
llvm-svn: 345249
This implements the support for .debug_loclists section, which is
DWARF 5 version of .debug_loc.
Currently, clang is able to emit it with the use of D53365.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53436
llvm-svn: 345016
After landing r341457, we started seeing a failure on the swift-lldb
bots. The change was correct and pretty straightforward, a DW_OP_constu
was replaced with DW_OP_lit23, the value remaining identical.
0x000000f4: DW_TAG_variable
DW_AT_location (0x00000000
[0x0000000100000a51, 0x0000000100000d47): DW_OP_lit23, DW_OP_stack_value)
DW_AT_name ("number")
However, this broke LLDB.
(Int) number = <extracting data from value failed>
The value was read correctly, but apparently the value's type was different.
When reading a constu it was reading a uint64 (m_type = e_ulonglong) while for
the literal, it got a signed int (m_type = e_sint). This change makes sure we
read the value as an unsigned.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51730
llvm-svn: 342142
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
we were printing an extra space before the start for the expression and
an extra space after some dwarf operators. This makes sure we only print
exactly one space **between** operators and nowhere else.
llvm-svn: 337452
This is a change that only affects Swift and is NFC for the language
plugins on llvm.org. In Swift, we can have global variables with a
location such as DW_OP_addr <addr> DW_OP_deref. The DWARF expression
evaluator doesn't know how to apply a DW_OP_deref to a file address,
but at the very end we convert the file address into a load address.
This patch moves the file->load address conversion to right after the
result of the DW_OP_addr is pushed onto the stack so that a subsequent
DW_OP_deref (and potentially other operations) can be interpreted.
rdar://problem/39767528
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46362
llvm-svn: 331492
This is a change that only affects Swift and is NFC for the language
plugins on llvm.org. In Swift, we can have global variables with a
location such as DW_OP_addr <addr> DW_OP_deref. The DWARF expression
evaluator doesn't know how to apply a DW_OP_deref to a file address,
but at the very end we convert the file address into a load address.
This patch moves the file->load address conversion to right after the
result of the DW_OP_addr is pushed onto the stack so that a subsequent
DW_OP_deref (and potentially other operations) can be interpreted.
rdar://problem/39767528
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46362
llvm-svn: 331462
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
Now the codebase can use the DWARFUnit superclass. It will make it later
seamlessly work also with DWARFPartialUnit for DWZ.
This patch is only a search-and-replace easily undone, nothing interesting
in it.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42892
llvm-svn: 327810
It was completly unused and broke the part of the encapsulation that
common code shouldn't depend on specific plugins or language specific
features.
llvm-svn: 311000
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
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
With this patch, the only dependency left is from Utility
to Host. After this is broken, Utility will finally be
standalone.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29909
llvm-svn: 295088
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
Note that the parsing code here is still incorrect wrt. the new draft of the
dwarf 5 spec (seconds arguments to DW_LLE_startx_length should be uleb128, not
u32). Once we have compilers actually emitting dwarf conformant with the new
spec, we'll need to revisit this and figure out the proper behavior there.
This should unbreak the linux bot.
llvm-svn: 285562
Thanks to Zachary Turner for the suggestion. It's distasteful that the actual
type of the lambda can't be spelled out, but it should be evident from the
definition of the lambda body.
llvm-svn: 281536
*** to conform to clang-format’s LLVM style. This kind of mass change has
*** two obvious implications:
Firstly, merging this particular commit into a downstream fork may be a huge
effort. Alternatively, it may be worth merging all changes up to this commit,
performing the same reformatting operation locally, and then discarding the
merge for this particular commit. The commands used to accomplish this
reformatting were as follows (with current working directory as the root of
the repository):
find . \( -iname "*.c" -or -iname "*.cpp" -or -iname "*.h" -or -iname "*.mm" \) -exec clang-format -i {} +
find . -iname "*.py" -exec autopep8 --in-place --aggressive --aggressive {} + ;
The version of clang-format used was 3.9.0, and autopep8 was 1.2.4.
Secondly, “blame” style tools will generally point to this commit instead of
a meaningful prior commit. There are alternatives available that will attempt
to look through this change and find the appropriate prior commit. YMMV.
llvm-svn: 280751
When a process stops due to a crash, we get the crashing instruction and the
crashing memory location (if there is one). From the user's perspective it is
often unclear what the reason for the crash is in a symbolic sense.
To address this, I have added new fuctionality to StackFrame to parse the
disassembly and reconstruct the sequence of dereferneces and offsets that were
applied to a known variable (or fuction retrn value) to obtain the invalid
pointer.
This makes use of enhancements in the disassembler, as well as new information
provided by the DWARF expression infrastructure, and is exposed through a
"frame diagnose" command. It is also used to provide symbolic information, when
available, in the event of a crash.
The algorithm is very rudimentary, and it needs a bunch of work, including
- better parsing for assembly, preferably with help from LLVM
- support for non-Apple platforms
- cleanup of the algorithm core, preferably to make it all work in terms of
Operands instead of register/offset pairs
- improvement of the GetExpressioPath() logic to make prettier expression
paths, and
- better handling of vtables.
I welcome all suggestios, improvements, and testcases.
llvm-svn: 280692
We had support that assumed that thread local data for a variable could be determined solely from the module in which the variable exists. While this work for linux, it doesn't work for Apple OSs. The DWARF for thread local variables consists of location opcodes that do something like:
DW_OP_const8u (x)
DW_OP_form_tls_address
or
DW_OP_const8u (x)
DW_OP_GNU_push_tls_address
The "x" is allowed to be anything that is needed to determine the location of the variable. For Linux "x" is the offset within the TLS data for a given executable (ModuleSP in LLDB). For Apple OS variants, it is the file address of the data structure that contains a pthread key that can be used with pthread_getspecific() and the offset needed.
This fix passes the "x" along to the thread:
virtual lldb::addr_t
lldb_private::Thread::GetThreadLocalData(const lldb::ModuleSP module, lldb::addr_t tls_file_addr);
Then this is passed along to the DynamicLoader::GetThreadLocalData():
virtual lldb::addr_t
lldb_private::DynamicLoader::GetThreadLocalData(const lldb::ModuleSP module, const lldb::ThreadSP thread, lldb::addr_t tls_file_addr);
This allows each DynamicLoader plug-in do the right thing for the current OS.
The DynamicLoaderMacOSXDYLD was modified to be able to grab the pthread key from the data structure that is in memory and call "void *pthread_getspecific(pthread_key_t key)" to get the value of the thread local storage and it caches it per thread since it never changes.
I had to update the test case to access the thread local data before trying to print it as on Apple OS variants, thread locals are not available unless they have been accessed at least one by the current thread.
I also added a new lldb::ValueType named "eValueTypeVariableThreadLocal" so that we can ask SBValue objects for their ValueType and be able to tell when we have a thread local variable.
<rdar://problem/23308080>
llvm-svn: 274366
If we have a TargetLoadAddress on the top of the DWARF stack then a
DW_OP_plus or a DW_OP_plus_ucons sholudn't dereference (resolve) it
and then add the value to the dereferenced value but it should offset
the load address by the specified constant.
llvm-svn: 262339
Additionally fix the type of some dwarf expression where we had a
confusion between scalar and load address types after a dereference.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17604
llvm-svn: 262014
There are still a bunch of dependencies on the plug-in, but this helps to
identify them.
There are also a few more bits we need to move (and abstract, for example the
ClangPersistentVariables).
llvm-svn: 248612
Split-dwarf uses a different header format to specify the address range
for the elements of the location lists.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12880
llvm-svn: 247789
Summary:
When lldb is processing a location containing DW_OP_piece, the result is being
stored in the 'pieces' variable. The location is popped from the 'stack' variable.
So this check to see that 'stack' is not empty was invalid and caused the pieces
after the first to not get processed.
I am working on an architecture which has 16-bit and 8-bit registers. So this
problem was quite easy to see. But I was able to re-produce this issue on x86
too with long long variable and compiling woth -m32. It resulted in following
location list.
00000014 08048496 080484b5 (DW_OP_reg6 (esi); DW_OP_piece: 4; DW_OP_reg7 (edi); DW_OP_piece: 4)
and lldb was only showing the contents of first register when I evaluated the
variable as it does not process the 2nd piece due to this check.
Reviewers: clayborg, aprantl
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12674
llvm-svn: 247124
This is still something I need to fix, but at least it's not so ugly, and it's
consistent with the other code that does that so we will catch it when we purge
all such code.
llvm-svn: 246738
Clang-specific part, create the ExpressionVariable source/header file and
move ClangExpressionVariable into the Clang expression parser plugin.
It is expected that there are some ugly #include paths... these will be resolved
by either (1) making that code use generic expression variables (once they're
separated appropriately) or (2) moving that code into a plug-in, often
the expression parser plug-in.
llvm-svn: 246737
So that we don't have to update every single #include in the entire
codebase to #include this new header (which used to get included by
lldb-private-log.h, we automatically #include "Logging.h" from
within "Log.h".
llvm-svn: 232653
operator in addition to the vendor-extension DW_OP_GNU_push_tls_address.
clang on PS4 and Darwin will be emitting the standard opcode
as of r231286 via http://reviews.llvm.org/D8018
Behavior of this standard opcode is the same as
DW_OP_GNU_push_tls_address.
<rdar://problem/20043195>
llvm-svn: 231342
DW_OP_fbreg(N) DW_OP_piece(4) DW_OP_fbreg(M) DW_OP_piece(8)
DW_OP_fbreg(N) DW_OP_piece(4) DW_OP_piece(8)
The first grabs 4 bytes from FP+N followed by 8 bytes from FP+M, the second grabs 4 bytes from FP+N followed by zero filling 8 bytes which are unavailable. Of course regiters are stuff supported:
DW_OP_reg3 DW_OP_piece(4) DW_OP_reg8 DW_OP_piece(8)
The fix does the following:
1 - don't push the full piece value onto the stack, keep it on the side
2 - fill zeros for DW_OP_piece(N) opcodes that have nothing on the stack (instead of previously consuming the full piece that was pushed onto the stack)
3 - simplify the logic
<rdar://problem/16930524>
llvm-svn: 214415
As done in other DW_OP_* cases, return an error if the stack is empty
rather than eventually crashing elsewhere. Encountered on big-endian
MIPS, where LLVM bugs currently result in invalid .debug_loc data.
llvm-svn: 199110
pure virtual base class and made StackFrame a subclass of that. As
I started to build on top of that arrangement today, I found that it
wasn't working out like I intended. Instead I'll try sticking with
the single StackFrame class -- there's too much code duplication to
make a more complicated class hierarchy sensible I think.
llvm-svn: 193983
defines a protocol that all subclasses will implement. StackFrame
is currently the only subclass and the methods that Frame vends are
nearly identical to StackFrame's old methods.
Update all callers to use Frame*/Frame& instead of pointers to
StackFrames.
This is almost entirely a mechanical change that touches a lot of
the code base so I'm committing it alone. No new functionality is
added with this patch, no new subclasses of Frame exist yet.
I'll probably need to tweak some of the separation, possibly moving
some of StackFrame's methods up in to Frame, but this is a good
starting point.
<rdar://problem/15314068>
llvm-svn: 193907
In almost all cases, the misuse is about "%lu" being used instead of the correct "%zu" (even though these are compatible on 64-bit platforms in practice). There are even a couple of cases where "%ld" (ie., signed int) is used instead of "%zu", and one where "%lu" is used instead of "%" PRIu64.
Fixes bug #17551.
Patch by "/dev/humancontroller"
llvm-svn: 193832
To make this work this patch extends LLDB to:
- Explicitly track the link_map address for each module. This is effectively the module handle, not sure why it wasn't already being stored off anywhere. As an extension later, it would be nice if someone were to add support for printing this as part of the modules list.
- Allow reading the per-thread data pointer via ptrace. I have added support for Linux here. I'll be happy to add support for FreeBSD once this is reviewed. OS X does not appear to have __thread variables, so maybe we don't need it there. Windows support should eventually be workable along the same lines.
- Make DWARF expressions track which module they originated from.
- Add support for the DW_OP_GNU_push_tls_address DWARF opcode, as generated by gcc and recent versions of clang. Earlier versions of clang (such as 3.2, which is default on Ubuntu right now) do not generate TLS debug info correctly so can not be supported here.
- Understand the format of the pthread DTV block. This is where it gets tricky. We have three basic options here:
1) Call "dlinfo" or "__tls_get_addr" on the inferior and ask it directly. However this won't work on core dumps, and generally speaking it's not a good idea for the debugger to call functions itself, as it has the potential to not work depending on the state of the target.
2) Use libthread_db. This is what GDB does. However this option requires having a version of libthread_db on the host cross-compiled for each potential target. This places a large burden on the user, and would make it very hard to cross-debug from Windows to Linux, for example. Trying to build a library intended exclusively for one OS on a different one is not pleasant. GDB sidesteps the problem and asks the user to figure it out.
3) Parse the DTV structure ourselves. On initial inspection this seems to be a bad option, as the DTV structure (the format used by the runtime to manage TLS data) is not in fact a kernel data structure, it is implemented entirely in useerland in libc. Therefore the layout of it's fields are version and OS dependent, and are not standardized.
However, it turns out not to be such a problem. All OSes use basically the same algorithm (a per-module lookup table) as detailed in Ulrich Drepper's TLS ELF ABI document, so we can easily write code to decode it ourselves. The only question therefore is the exact field layouts required. Happily, the implementors of libpthread expose the structure of the DTV via metadata exported as symbols from the .so itself, designed exactly for this kind of thing. So this patch simply reads that metadata in, and re-implements libthread_db's algorithm itself. We thereby get cross-platform TLS lookup without either requiring third-party libraries, while still being independent of the version of libpthread being used.
Test case included.
llvm-svn: 192922
the extra check introduces 22 new test failures with the LLDB clang buildbot.
Note that the unhandled DWARF_OP codes in DWARFExpression::Evaluate don't cause test failures if the check is ignored.
llvm-svn: 187480
in LLDB that load the canonical frame address rather than a location list.
- Handles the simple case where a CFA can be pulled from the current stack frame.
- Fixes more than one hundred failing tests with gcc 4.8!
TODO: Use UnwindPlan::GetRowForFunctionOffset if the DWARFExpression needs
to be evaluated in a context analogous to a virtual unwind (perhaps using RegisterContextLLDB).
- Also adds some comments to DWARFCallFrameInfo whenever I got confused.
llvm-svn: 187361
A long time ago we start with clang types that were created by the symbol files and there were many functions in lldb_private::ClangASTContext that helped. Later we create ClangASTType which contains a clang::ASTContext and an opauque QualType, but we didn't switch over to fully using it. There were a lot of places where we would pass around a raw clang_type_t and also pass along a clang::ASTContext separately. This left room for error.
This checkin change all type code over to use ClangASTType everywhere and I cleaned up the interfaces quite a bit. Any code that was in ClangASTContext that was type related, was moved over into ClangASTType. All code that used these types was switched over to use all of the new goodness.
llvm-svn: 186130
Show variables that were in the debug info but optimized out. Also display a good error message when one of these variables get used in an expression.
llvm-svn: 182066
LLDB is crashing when logging is enabled from lldb-perf-clang. This has to do with the global destructor chain as the process and its threads are being torn down.
All logging channels now make one and only one instance that is kept in a global pointer which is never freed. This guarantees that logging can correctly continue as the process tears itself down.
llvm-svn: 178191
DWARF with .o files now uses 40-60% less memory!
Big fixes include:
- Change line table internal representation to contain "file addresses". Since each line table is owned by a compile unit that is owned by a module, it makes address translation into lldb_private::Address easy to do when needed.
- Removed linked address members/methods from lldb_private::Section and lldb_private::Address
- lldb_private::LineTable can now relink itself using a FileRangeMap to make it easier to re-link line tables in the future
- Added ObjectFile::ClearSymtab() so that we can get rid of the object file symbol tables after we parse them once since they are not needed and kept memory allocated for no reason
- Moved the m_sections_ap (std::auto_ptr to section list) and m_symtab_ap (std::auto_ptr to the lldb_private::Symtab) out of each of the ObjectFile subclasses and put it into lldb_private::ObjectFile.
- Changed how the debug map is parsed and stored to be able to:
- Lazily parse the debug map for each object file
- not require the address map for a .o file until debug information is linked for a .o file
llvm-svn: 176454
Major fixed to allow reading files that are over 4GB. The main problems were that the DataExtractor was using 32 bit offsets as a data cursor, and since we mmap all of our object files we could run into cases where if we had a very large core file that was over 4GB, we were running into the 4GB boundary.
So I defined a new "lldb::offset_t" which should be used for all file offsets.
After making this change, I enabled warnings for data loss and for enexpected implicit conversions temporarily and found a ton of things that I fixed.
Any functions that take an index internally, should use "size_t" for any indexes and also should return "size_t" for any sizes of collections.
llvm-svn: 173463
Fixed an issue that could cause references the shared data for an object file to stay around longer than intended and could cause memory bloat when debugging multiple times.
llvm-svn: 161716
parser was creating malformed resuls. When the
location of a variable is computed by reading a
register and adding an offset, we shouldn't say
that the variable's value is located in that
register. This was confusing the expression
parser when trying to read a variable captured
by a block.
llvm-svn: 147668
Be better at detecting when DWARF changes and handle this more
gracefully than asserting and exiting.
Also fixed up a bunch of system calls that weren't properly checking
for EINTR.
llvm-svn: 147559
This is the actual fix for the above radar where global variables that weren't
initialized were not being shown correctly when leaving the DWARF in the .o
files. Global variables that aren't intialized have symbols in the .o files
that specify they are undefined and external to the .o file, yet document the
size of the variable. This allows the compiler to emit a single copy, but makes
it harder for our DWARF in .o files with the executable having a debug map
because the symbol for the global in the .o file doesn't exist in a section
that we can assign a fixed up linked address to, and also the DWARF contains
an invalid address in the "DW_OP_addr" location (always zero). This means that
the DWARF is incorrect and actually maps all such global varaibles to the
first file address in the .o file which is usually the first function. So we
can fix this in either of two ways: make a new fake section in the .o file
so that we have a file address in the .o file that we can relink, or fix the
the variable as it is created in the .o file DWARF parser and actually give it
the file address from the executable. Each variable contains a
SymbolContextScope, or a single pointer that helps us to recreate where the
variables came from (which module, file, function, etc). This context helps
us to resolve any file addresses that might be in the location description of
the variable by pointing us to which file the file address comes from, so we
can just replace the SymbolContextScope and also fix up the location, which we
would have had to do for the other case as well, and update the file address.
Now globals display correctly.
The above changes made it possible to determine if a variable is a global
or static variable when parsing DWARF. The DWARF emits a DW_TAG_variable tag
for each variable (local, global, or static), yet DWARF provides no way for
us to classify these variables into these categories. We can now detect when
a variable has a simple address expressions as its location and this will help
us classify these correctly.
While making the above changes I also noticed that we had two symbol types:
eSymbolTypeExtern and eSymbolTypeUndefined which mean essentially the same
thing: the symbol is not defined in the current object file. Symbol objects
also have a bit that specifies if a symbol is externally visible, so I got
rid of the eSymbolTypeExtern symbol type and moved all code locations that
used it to use the eSymbolTypeUndefined type.
llvm-svn: 144489
FindExternalVisibleDecls and FindExternalLexicalDecls
are marked and given unique IDs, so that all logging
done as part of their execution can be traced back to
the proper call.
Also there was some logging that really wasn't helpful
in most cases so I disabled it unless verbose logging
(log enable -v lldb expr) is enabled.
llvm-svn: 141987
shared pointers.
Changed the ExecutionContext over to use shared pointers for
the target, process, thread and frame since these objects can
easily go away at any time and any object that was holding onto
an ExecutionContext was running the risk of using a bad object.
Now that the shared pointers for target, process, thread and
frame are just a single pointer (they all use the instrusive
shared pointers) the execution context is much safer and still
the same size.
Made the shared pointers in the the ExecutionContext class protected
and made accessors for all of the various ways to get at the pointers,
references, and shared pointers.
llvm-svn: 140298
stdarg formats to use __attribute__ format so the compiler can flag
incorrect uses. Fix all incorrect uses. Most of these are innocuous,
a few were resulting in crashes.
llvm-svn: 140185
__attribute__ format so the compiler knows that this method takes
printf style formatter arguments and checks that it's being used
correctly. Fix a couple dozen incorrect SetErrorStringWithFormat()
calls throughout the sources.
llvm-svn: 140115
register names when dumping variable locations and location lists. Also did
some cleanup where "int" types were being used for "lldb::RegisterKind"
values.
llvm-svn: 138988
with the "target modules lookup --address <addr>" command. The variable
ID's, names, types, location for the address, and declaration is
displayed.
This can really help with crash logs since we get, on MacOSX at least,
the registers for the thread that crashed so it is often possible to
figure out some of the variable contents.
llvm-svn: 134886
variables prior to running your binary. Zero filled sections now get
section data correctly filled with zeroes when Target::ReadMemory
reads from the object file section data.
Added new option groups and option values for file lists. I still need
to hook up all of the options to "target variable" to allow more complete
introspection by file and shlib.
Added the ability for ValueObjectVariable objects to be created with
only the target as the execution context. This allows them to be read
from the object files through Target::ReadMemory(...).
Added a "virtual Module * GetModule()" function to the ValueObject
class. By default it will look to the parent variable object and
return its module. The module is needed when we have global variables
that have file addresses (virtual addresses that are specific to
module object files) and in turn allows global variables to be displayed
prior to running.
Removed all of the unused proxy object support that bit rotted in
lldb_private::Value.
Replaced a lot of places that used "FileSpec::Compare (lhs, rhs) == 0" code
with the more efficient "FileSpec::Equal (lhs, rhs)".
Improved logging in GDB remote plug-in.
llvm-svn: 134579
into some cleanup I have been wanting to do when reading/writing registers.
Previously all RegisterContext subclasses would need to implement:
virtual bool
ReadRegisterBytes (uint32_t reg, DataExtractor &data);
virtual bool
WriteRegisterBytes (uint32_t reg, DataExtractor &data, uint32_t data_offset = 0);
There is now a new class specifically designed to hold register values:
lldb_private::RegisterValue
The new register context calls that subclasses must implement are:
virtual bool
ReadRegister (const RegisterInfo *reg_info, RegisterValue ®_value) = 0;
virtual bool
WriteRegister (const RegisterInfo *reg_info, const RegisterValue ®_value) = 0;
The RegisterValue class must be big enough to handle any register value. The
class contains an enumeration for the value type, and then a union for the
data value. Any integer/float values are stored directly in an appropriate
host integer/float. Anything bigger is stored in a byte buffer that has a length
and byte order. The RegisterValue class also knows how to copy register value
bytes into in a buffer with a specified byte order which can be used to write
the register value down into memory, and this does the right thing when not
all bytes from the register values are needed (getting a uint8 from a uint32
register value..).
All RegiterContext and other sources have been switched over to using the new
regiter value class.
llvm-svn: 131096