Commit Graph

285 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Saleem Abdulrasool 324a103619 sweep up -Wformat warnings from gcc
This is a purely mechanical change explicitly casting any parameters for printf
style conversion.  This cleans up the warnings emitted by gcc 4.8 on Linux.

llvm-svn: 205607
2014-04-04 04:06:10 +00:00
Saleem Abdulrasool 3985c8c646 sanitise sign comparisons
This is a mechanical change addressing the various sign comparison warnings that
are identified by both clang and gcc.  This helps cleanup some of the warning
spew that occurs during builds.

llvm-svn: 205390
2014-04-02 03:51:35 +00:00
Jason Molenda a332978b2a lldb arm64 import.
These changes were written by Greg Clayton, Jim Ingham, Jason Molenda.

It builds cleanly against TOT llvm with xcodebuild.  I updated the
cmake files by visual inspection but did not try a build.  I haven't
built these sources on any non-Mac platforms - I don't think this
patch adds any code that requires darwin, but please let me know if
I missed something.

In debugserver, MachProcess.cpp and MachTask.cpp were renamed to
MachProcess.mm and MachTask.mm as they picked up some new Objective-C
code needed to launch processes when running on iOS.

llvm-svn: 205113
2014-03-29 18:54:20 +00:00
Greg Clayton 23f8c95a44 JITed functions can now have debug info and be debugged with debug and source info:
(lldb) b puts
(lldb) expr -g -i0 -- (int)puts("hello")

First we will stop at the entry point of the expression before it runs, then we can step over a few times and hit the breakpoint in "puts", then we can continue and finishing stepping and fininsh the expression.

Main features:
- New ObjectFileJIT class that can be easily created for JIT functions
- debug info can now be enabled when parsing expressions
- source for any function that is run throught the JIT is now saved in LLDB process specific temp directory and cleaned up on exit
- "expr -g --" allows you to single step through your expression function with source code

<rdar://problem/16382881>

llvm-svn: 204682
2014-03-24 23:10:19 +00:00
Hafiz Abid Qadeer b768fe5ea1 Renamed a struct from i386 to i386_.
It is to avoid build error when gcc defines i386.

llvm-svn: 204628
2014-03-24 17:33:09 +00:00
Jim Ingham 7dabe1a1b6 If a single step ends on a breakpoint, it should be reported as a breakpoint hit
even though the underlying exception is a trace exception.

<rdar://problem/15243355>

llvm-svn: 204534
2014-03-22 00:44:41 +00:00
Greg Clayton 906e9acf91 Switch over to use the ArchSpec::GetMachine() instead of ArchSpec::GetCore() to keep the code more portable as we add new core types to ArchSpec.
llvm-svn: 204400
2014-03-20 21:31:55 +00:00
Virgile Bello 3e699d419e Moved various RegisterContext files from Process/POSIX to Process/Utility for easier sharing.
Fix Windows build by adding JITLoaderGDB and ProcessElfCore.
RegisterContext: fixes for Windows build: sizeof(GPR::register) didn't work, switched to sizeof(((GPR*)NULL)->register).

llvm-svn: 203667
2014-03-12 16:04:29 +00:00
Virgile Bello 2641e383a2 Fix unwind_plan test conditions (could result in NULL memory access).
llvm-svn: 203385
2014-03-09 10:01:25 +00:00
Jason Molenda a8ff543c28 When a client asks for a queue pending item's extended backtrace,
hold a strong pointer to that extended backtrace thread in the Process
just like we do for asking a thread's extended backtrace.
Also, give extended backtrace threads an invalid ThreadIndexID number.
We'll still give them valid thread_id's.  Clients who want to know the
original thread's IndexID can call GetExtendedBacktraceOriginatingIndexID().
<rdar://problem/16126034> 

llvm-svn: 203088
2014-03-06 06:31:18 +00:00
Greg Clayton 6fea17e874 "size_t" isn't always 64 bit, it is 32 bit on 32 bit systems. All printf style statements that were assuming size_t were 64 bit were changed, and they were also changed to display them as unsigned values as "size_t" isn't signed.
If you print anything with 'size_t', please cast it to "uint64_t" in the printf and use PRIu64 or PRIx64.

llvm-svn: 202738
2014-03-03 19:15:20 +00:00
Deepak Panickal 99fbc07600 Fix Windows build using portable types for formatting the log outputs
llvm-svn: 202723
2014-03-03 15:39:47 +00:00
Jason Molenda 31d7ad4ecf Add a new idea of a "fallback" UnwindPlan to the RegisterContextLLDB
class.  If we try to unwind a stack frame to find a caller stack
frame, and we fail to get a valid-looking frame, AND if the UnwindPlan
we used is an assembly-inspection based UnwindPlan, then we should 
throw away the assembly-inspection UnwindPlan and try unwinding with 
the architectural default UnwindPlan.  

This code path won't be taken if eh_frame unwind instructions are available -
lldb will always prefer those once it's off the zeroth frame.

The problem I'm trying to fix here is the class of unwind failures that
happen when we have hand-written assembly on the stack, with no eh_frame,
and lldb's assembly parser fails to understand the assembly.  People usually
write their hand-written assembly to follow the frame-pointer-preserving
conventions of the platform so the architectural default UnwindPlan will 
often work.  We won't have the spill location for most of the non-volatile
registers if we fall back to this, but it's better than stopping the unwind
prematurely.

This is a bit of a tricky change that I believe is correct, but if we get
unwinds that go of into the weeds / unwind bogus frames at the end of the
stack, I'll need to revisit it.

<rdar://problem/16099440> 

llvm-svn: 201839
2014-02-21 05:20:25 +00:00
Jason Molenda a4bea72ee7 Add a new target setting, trap-handler-names, where a user can
specify a list of functions which should be treated as trap handlers.
This will be primarily useful to people working in non-user-level
process debugging - kernels and other standalone environments.
For most people, the trap handler functions provided by the Platform
plugin will be sufficient.

<rdar://problem/15835846>, <rdar://problem/15982682> 

llvm-svn: 201386
2014-02-14 05:06:49 +00:00
Jason Molenda 6223db2778 The Platform base class now maintains a list of trap handlers
aka asynchronous signal handlers, which subclasses should fill
in as appropriate.  For most Unix user process environments,
the one entry in this list is _sigtramp.  For bare-board and
kernel environments, there will be different sets of trap 
handlers.

The unwinder needs to know when a frame is a trap handler 
because the rules it enforces for the frame "above" the
trap handler is different from most middle-of-the-stack frames.

<rdar://problem/15835846> 

llvm-svn: 201300
2014-02-13 07:11:08 +00:00
Jason Molenda 2fd83355a8 Change the Mac OS X SystemRuntime plugin from using the placeholder
libldi library to collect extended backtrace information; switch
to the libBacktraceRecording library and its APIs.  Complete the
work of adding QueueItems to Queues and allow for the QueueItems
to be interrogated about their extended backtraces in turn.

There's still cleanup and documentation to do on this code but the
code is functional and I it's a good time to get the work-in-progress 
checked in.  
<rdar://problem/15314027> 

llvm-svn: 200822
2014-02-05 05:44:54 +00:00
Todd Fiala 31cb474e2d Fix for failure to unwind Linux stack frames with call in final position.
Fixes http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=18656.

Note this exposes a failure on Linux of
TestInferiorAssert.test_inferior_asserting_disassemble, similar to how
it fails on FreeBSD. I'll file a bug for this next. We're now getting
another frame beyond where we used to prior to this fix, so the fix is
exposing failures in previosly not-reachable frames.

Much thanks to Jason Molenda, who had much to do with helping figure
out where unwinding was breaking.

llvm-svn: 200600
2014-02-01 00:48:34 +00:00
Jason Molenda 7f6d84b9c1 Add the offset for cfa+offset log messages in the unwind channel, to aid in debugging.
llvm-svn: 198977
2014-01-10 23:53:32 +00:00
Jim Ingham 1460e4bf0e Get the breakpoint setting, and the Mac OS X DYLD trampolines and expression evaluator to handle Indirect
symbols correctly.  There were a couple of pieces to this.

1) When a breakpoint location finds itself pointing to an Indirect symbol, when the site for it is created
   it needs to resolve the symbol and actually set the site at its target.
2) Not all breakpoints want to do this (i.e. a straight address breakpoint should always set itself on the
   specified address, so somem machinery was needed to specify that.
3) I added some info to the break list output for indirect symbols so you could see what was happening. 
   Also I made it clear when we re-route through re-exported symbols.
4) I moved ResolveIndirectFunction from ProcessPosix to Process since it works the exact same way on Mac OS X
   and the other posix systems.  If we find a platform that doesn't do it this way, they can override the
   call in Process.
5) Fixed one bug in RunThreadPlan, if you were trying to run a thread plan after a "running" event had
   been broadcast, the event coalescing would cause you to miss the ThreadPlan running event.  So I added
   a way to override the coalescing.
6) Made DynamicLoaderMacOSXDYLD::GetStepThroughTrampolinePlan handle Indirect & Re-exported symbols.

<rdar://problem/15280639>

llvm-svn: 198976
2014-01-10 23:46:59 +00:00
Jason Molenda 83f1149b30 Use Address::SetLoadAddress() instead of SectionLoadList::ResolveLoadAddress().
The former will set the Address object's offset to the load address value if
it is not present in any section; the latter will only set the Address object
if the load addr is contained in one of its sections.
<rdar://problem/15135987> 

llvm-svn: 198469
2014-01-04 01:37:52 +00:00
Jason Molenda 4b79247750 Don't enforce ABI stack alignment rules on the sigtramp frame --
its stack frame is a constructed, fake thing that may not conform
correctly to these rules.  This fixes a problem where lldb couldn't
backtrace past an asynchronous signal handler (_sigtramp) frame on
a stack on Mac OS X.
<rdar://problem/15035673> 

llvm-svn: 198450
2014-01-03 22:06:25 +00:00
Jason Molenda 3d21975a44 Partially revert a patch from Ashok Thirumurthi in r191430.
The original code was not completely correct, but a form of
this check is necessary to avoid an infinite recursion on
some unwind cases where a function unwinds to itself with the
same CFA.  Ashok thought the recursion would be caught in
RegisterContextLLDB but this one isn't - we still need it here.
<rdar://problem/15664282> 

llvm-svn: 197761
2013-12-20 01:05:11 +00:00
Jason Molenda 91e428bc90 Revert one part of Ashok Thirumurthi's patch from September 16, r190812.
In those set of patches, Ashok changed Module::ResolveSymbolContextForAddress 
so that if it failed to find a symbol for a pc, it could back up
the pc value by 1 and re-search for a symbol.

His change to RegisterContextLLDB.cpp partially duplicates that
behavior but it also removes the separate case where we find a
Symbol for the pc address but it's the wrong symbol -- we need to
handle this as well as the lookup-by-pc-finds-no-symbol case.

The most obvious fallout from this regression was that lldb on
Mac OS X couldn't backtrace past __assert_rtn() which tail-calls 
abort().  e.g.

(lldb) bt
* thread #1: tid = 0x5d6ea1, 0x00007fff8ee80866 libsystem_kernel.dylib`__pthread_kill + 10, queue = 'com.apple.main-thread', stop reason = signal SIGABRT
  * frame #0: 0x00007fff8ee80866 libsystem_kernel.dylib`__pthread_kill + 10
    frame #1: 0x00007fff8eb5835c libsystem_pthread.dylib`pthread_kill + 92
    frame #2: 0x00007fff8852ab1a libsystem_c.dylib`abort + 125
    frame #3: 0x00007fff884f49bf libsystem_c.dylib`__assert_rtn + 321
    frame #4: 0x0000000100000f2c a.out`main + 124

(lldb) dis -c 3 -s 0x7fff884f49b3
libsystem_c.dylib`__assert_rtn + 309:
   0x7fff884f49b3:  movq   %rax, -0x11b96242(%rip)   ; gCRAnnotations + 8
   0x7fff884f49ba:  callq  0x7fff8854fd2c            ; symbol stub for: abort

libsystem_c.dylib`basename:
   0x7fff884f49bf:  pushq  %rbp
(lldb) 

in this case, __assert_rtn() is immediately followed by basename() and 
the changes in r190812 didn't back up the pc value to get the correct
function name / unwind info.

<rdar://problem/15367233> 

llvm-svn: 197655
2013-12-19 04:32:42 +00:00
Greg Clayton d5944cd118 For logical backtrace work, lldb needs to track Module unloads etc & symoblicate an address based on a point in time
<rdar://problem/15314403> 

This patch adds a new lldb_private::SectionLoadHistory class that tracks what shared libraries were loaded given a process stop ID. This allows us to keep a history of the sections that were loaded for a time T. Many items in history objects will rely upon the process stop ID in the future.

llvm-svn: 196557
2013-12-06 01:12:00 +00:00
Jason Molenda a6e9130d52 Add logging for the SB API which creates extended
threads.

Take a stab at fixing the too-soon freeing of the extended
backtrace thread list in Process.
<rdar://problem/15496603> 

llvm-svn: 195104
2013-11-19 05:44:41 +00:00
Jason Molenda 8ee9cb5891 Add a new SBThread::GetExtendedBacktraceOriginatingIndexID() method
(and same thing to Thread base class) which can be used when looking
at an ExtendedBacktrace thread; it will try to find the IndexID() of
the original thread that was executing this backtrace when it was
recorded.  If lldb can't find a record of that thread, it will return
the same value as IndexID() for the ExtendedBacktrace thread.

llvm-svn: 194912
2013-11-16 01:24:22 +00:00
Jason Molenda a7b5afa91b Commit a work-in-progress system runtime for Mac OS X which won't
do anything right now.  Add a few new methods to the Thread base
class which HistoryThread needs.  I think I updated all the 
CMakeLists files correctly for the new plugin.

llvm-svn: 194756
2013-11-15 00:17:32 +00:00
Jason Molenda ee87e75090 Add object logging to HistoryThread. Call the DoDestroy() method from
the HistoryThread dtor.

llvm-svn: 194436
2013-11-12 00:09:58 +00:00
Jason Molenda 02706c3216 Add History subclasses for Thread, Unwind, RegisterContext.
Still working out some of the details of these classes but 
I wanted to get the overall structure checked in.
<rdar://problem/15314068> 

llvm-svn: 194245
2013-11-08 04:59:54 +00:00
Sean Callanan a464f3d43a Changed the ABIs and ClangFunction to take a
llvm::ArrayRef of arguments rather than taking
a fixed number of possibly-NULL pointers to
arguments.

Also changed ClangFunction::GetThreadPlanToCallFunction
to take the address of the argument struct by value
instead of by reference, since it doesn't actually
modify the value passed into it.

llvm-svn: 194232
2013-11-08 01:14:26 +00:00
Jim Ingham 6fbc48bc42 This patch does a couple of things.
It completes the job of using EvaluateExpressionOptions consistently throughout
the inferior function calling mechanism in lldb begun in Greg's patch r194009. 

It removes a handful of alternate calls into the ClangUserExpression/ClangFunction/ThreadPlanCallFunction which
were there for convenience.  Using the EvaluateExpressionOptions removes the need for them.

Using that it gets the --debug option from Greg's patch to work cleanly.

It also adds another EvaluateExpressionOption to not trap exceptions when running expressions.  You shouldn't
use this option unless you KNOW your expression can't throw beyond itself.  This is:

<rdar://problem/15374885>

At present this is only available through the SB API's or python.

It fixes a bug where function calls would unset the ObjC & C++ exception breakpoints without checking whether
they were set by somebody else already.

llvm-svn: 194182
2013-11-07 00:11:47 +00:00
Jason Molenda b57e4a1bc6 Roll back the changes I made in r193907 which created a new Frame
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
2013-11-04 09:33:30 +00:00
Jason Molenda f23bf7432c Add a new base class, Frame. It is a pure virtual function which
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
2013-11-02 02:23:02 +00:00
Richard Mitton 0a55835755 Added support for reading thread-local storage variables, as defined using the __thread modifier.
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
2013-10-17 21:14:00 +00:00
Greg Clayton 312bcbe8b4 <rdar://problem/14972424>
- Made the dynamic register context for the GDB remote plug-in inherit from the generic DynamicRegisterInfo to avoid code duplication
- Finished up the target definition python setting stuff.
- Added a new "slice" key/value pair that can specify that a register is part of another register:
    { 'name':'eax', 'set':0, 'bitsize':32, 'encoding':eEncodingUint, 'format':eFormatHex, 'slice': 'rax[31:0]' },
- Added a new "composite" key/value pair that can specify that a register is made up of two or more registers:
    { 'name':'d0', 'set':0, 'bitsize':64 , 'encoding':eEncodingIEEE754, 'format':eFormatFloat, 'composite': ['s1', 's0'] },
- Added a new "invalidate-regs" key/value pair for when a register is modified, it can invalidate other registers:
    { 'name':'cpsr', 'set':0, 'bitsize':32 , 'encoding':eEncodingUint, 'format':eFormatHex, 'invalidate-regs': ['r8', 'r9', 'r10', 'r11', 'r12', 'r13', 'r14', 'r15']},
    
This now completes the feature that allows a GDB remote target to completely describe itself.

llvm-svn: 192858
2013-10-17 01:10:23 +00:00
Greg Clayton ef8180a3f6 <rdar://problem/14972424>
When debugging with the GDB remote in LLDB, LLDB uses special packets to discover the
registers on the remote server. When those packets aren't supported, LLDB doesn't
know what the registers look like. This checkin implements a setting that can be used
to specify a python file that contains the registers definitions. The setting is:

(lldb) settings set plugin.process.gdb-remote.target-definition-file /path/to/module.py

Inside module there should be a function:

def get_dynamic_setting(target, setting_name):

This dynamic setting function is handed the "target" which is a SBTarget, and the 
"setting_name", which is the name of the dynamic setting to retrieve. For the GDB
remote target definition the setting name is 'gdb-server-target-definition'. The
return value is a dictionary that follows the same format as the OperatingSystem
plugins follow. I have checked in an example file that implements the x86_64 GDB
register set for people to see:

    examples/python/x86_64_target_definition.py
    
This allows LLDB to debug to any archticture that is support and allows users to
define the registers contexts when the discovery packets (qRegisterInfo, qHostInfo)
are not supported by the remote GDB server.

A few benefits of doing this in Python:
1 - The dynamic register context was already supported in the OperatingSystem plug-in
2 - Register contexts can use all of the LLDB enumerations and definitions for things
    like lldb::Format, lldb::Encoding, generic register numbers, invalid registers 
    numbers, etc.
3 - The code that generates the register context can use the program to calculate the
    register context contents (like offsets, register numbers, and more)
4 - True dynamic detection could be used where variables and types could be read from 
    the target program itself in order to determine which registers are available since
    the target is passed into the python function.
    
This is designed to be used instead of XML since it is more dynamic and code flow and
functions can be used to make the dictionary.

llvm-svn: 192646
2013-10-15 00:14:28 +00:00
Jason Molenda 82f5930db4 Change two new logging messages from verbose-only to non-verbose
in the unwinder - they're important to flag when debugging an
unwind problem.

llvm-svn: 191882
2013-10-03 07:58:37 +00:00
Jason Molenda 5bbc354edf Tweak logging messages from Ed's prev commit to make it a little more
clear what is happening in this case.

llvm-svn: 191860
2013-10-02 22:11:59 +00:00
Ed Maste 4ae2299b18 Avoid crash in unwinder if ABI isn't available
llvm-svn: 191837
2013-10-02 15:52:33 +00:00
Ashok Thirumurthi 8b5773053b Fix the partial backtrace in a recursive inferior compiled with -fomit-frame-pointer.
- Removes the block in UnwindLLDB::AddOneMoreFrame that tests for a bad stack setup,
since it is neither correct (tests the FP GPR), complete (doesn't consider multi-frame
cycles), nor reachable (the construction of RegisterContextLLDB will fail in the case 
where either of the two (why just two?) previous frames have the same canonical frame
address as the frame that we propose adding to the stack).

llvm-svn: 191430
2013-09-26 14:35:59 +00:00
Ashok Thirumurthi 35729bb1f8 Adds an option to resolve a symbol from an address that can be used
to build out the symbol table as addresses are used, and implements
the mechanism for ELF to add stripped symbols from eh_frame.

Uses this mechanism to allow disassembly for addresses corresponding
to stripped symbols for ELF, and provide hooks to implement this for
PE COFF.

Also removes eSymbolContextTailCall in favor of an option for
ResolveSymbolContextForAddress for consistency with the documentation
for eSymbolContextEverything.  Essentially, this is just an option for
interpreting the so_addr.
                  

llvm-svn: 191307
2013-09-24 15:34:13 +00:00
Jason Molenda 2cd21b87cd Update RegisterContextLLDB::GetFullUnwindPlanForFrame() to use the architectural-
default-at-first-instruction UnwindPlan if we're at the beginning of a function and
the ABI can provide us with an UnwindPlan to get out of there before falling back
to the generic architectural default UnwindPlan (which usually assumes that the stack
has already been set up.)

Update the FuncUnwinders methods to gracefully handle the case where an assembly
profiler may not be available.

Fix a bug where FuncUnwinders::GetUnwindPlanArchitectureDefaultAtFunctionEntry was
returning the wrong UnwindPlan to its caller.

llvm-svn: 191262
2013-09-24 02:42:54 +00:00
Ashok Thirumurthi 2568f45939 Fix lldb regressions due to r190812 in the case where debug info is present.
Specifically, allows the unwinder to handle the case where sc.function
gets resolved with a pc that is one past the address range of the function
(consistent with a tail call).  However, there is no matching symbol.

Adds eSymbolContextTailCall to provide callers with control over the scope
of symbol resolution and to allow ResolveSymbolContextForAddress to handle
tail calls since this routine is common to unwind and disassembly.

llvm-svn: 191102
2013-09-20 19:05:10 +00:00
Sylvestre Ledru 88483a3130 Fix build failures under GNU/Linux running on mips
llvm-svn: 191027
2013-09-19 19:06:57 +00:00
Virgile Bello d0c5c776bc Visual Studio 2013 compilation support: added some #ifdef _MSC_VER for unsupported code in MSVC.
llvm-svn: 190924
2013-09-18 08:09:31 +00:00
Ashok Thirumurthi 3880714172 Fixes symbol resolution for a function with a tail call because the PC
for the frame is one past the address range of the calling function.
- Lowers the fix from RegisterContextLLDB for use with disassembly
- Fixes one of three issues in the disassembly test in TestInferiorAssert.py

Also adds documentation that explains the resolution depths and interface.

Note: This change affects the resolution scope for eSymbolContextFunction
without impacting the performance of eSymbolContextSymbol.

Thanks to Matt Kopec for his review.

llvm-svn: 190812
2013-09-16 22:00:17 +00:00
Virgile Bello b2f1fb2943 MingW compilation (windows). Includes various refactoring to improve portability.
llvm-svn: 189107
2013-08-23 12:44:05 +00:00
Michael Sartain 6e33ae64c4 add register name to UnwindLog error message
llvm-svn: 189062
2013-08-22 21:00:35 +00:00
Jason Molenda e6ca2ee6b8 Don't use a function-scope static varaibles in
RegisterContextLLDB::SavedLocationForRegister to cache the pc and
sp register numbers -- if lldb is debugging multiple Targets of
different architectures, this will be incorrect.  If these were
to be cached anywhere, it would have to be up in the Target.

llvm-svn: 186651
2013-07-19 04:39:22 +00:00
Ashok Thirumurthi 044c36a21c Fix the partial backtrace when using a combination of stripped function symbols
and -fomit-frame-pointer.

- Parses eh_frame FDEs to determine the function address and size so that
the call frame parsing can continue.

Note: This code path is specific to ELF and PECOFF, because ObjectFileMachO
uses LCT_FunctionStarts to efficiently populate the symbol table.

Thanks to Jason Molenda for the review!

llvm-svn: 186585
2013-07-18 15:05:56 +00:00