Before we had:
ClangFunction
ClangUtilityFunction
ClangUserExpression
and code all over in lldb that explicitly made Clang-based expressions. This patch adds an Expression
base class, and three pure virtual implementations for the Expression kinds:
FunctionCaller
UtilityFunction
UserExpression
You can request one of these expression types from the Target using the Get<ExpressionType>ForLanguage.
The Target will then consult all the registered TypeSystem plugins, and if the type system that matches
the language can make an expression of that kind, it will do so and return it.
Because all of the real expression types need to communicate with their ExpressionParser in a uniform way,
I also added a ExpressionTypeSystemHelper class that expressions generically can vend, and a ClangExpressionHelper
that encapsulates the operations that the ClangExpressionParser needs to perform on the ClangExpression types.
Then each of the Clang* expression kinds constructs the appropriate helper to do what it needs.
The patch also fixes a wart in the UtilityFunction that to use it you had to create a parallel FunctionCaller
to actually call the function made by the UtilityFunction. Now the UtilityFunction can be asked to vend a
FunctionCaller that will run its function. This cleaned up a lot of boiler plate code using UtilityFunctions.
Note, in this patch all the expression types explicitly depend on the LLVM JIT and IR, and all the common
JIT running code is in the FunctionCaller etc base classes. At some point we could also abstract that dependency
but I don't see us adding another back end in the near term, so I'll leave that exercise till it is actually necessary.
llvm-svn: 247720
stores information about a variable that different parts of LLDB use, from the
compiler-specific portion that only the expression parser cares about.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D12602
llvm-svn: 246871
SUMMARY:
Last 3bits of the watchpoint address are masked by the kernel. For example, n is
at 0x120010d00 and m is 0x120010d04. When a watchpoint is set at m, then watch
exception is generated even when n is read/written. To handle this case, instruction
at PC is emulated to find the base address of the load/store instruction. This address
is then appended to the description of the stop-info packet. Client then reads this
information to check whether the user has set a watchpoint on this address.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: nitesh.jain, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan and lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11672
llvm-svn: 244864
owners list, so the StopInfo machinery can get the list of owners without
some other thread being able to mess up the list by deleting/disabline one of its
locations in the process of doing so.
<rdar://problem/18685197>
llvm-svn: 243541
Summary:
- Consolidate Unix signals selection in UnixSignals.
- Make Unix signals available from platform.
- Add jSignalsInfo packet to retrieve Unix signals from remote platform.
- Get a copy of the platform signal for each remote process.
- Update SB API for signals.
- Update signal utility in test suite.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: chaoren, jingham, labath, emaste, tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11094
llvm-svn: 242101
Since interaction with the python interpreter is moving towards
being more isolated, we won't be able to include this header from
normal files anymore, all includes of it should be localized to
the python library which will live under source/bindings/API/Python
after a future patch.
None of the files that were including this header actually depended
on it anyway, so it was just a dead include in every single instance.
llvm-svn: 238581
Summary:
Previously, we reported inferior receiving SIGSEGV (or SIGILL, SIGFPE, SIGBUS) as an "exception"
to LLDB, presumably to match OSX behaviour. Beside the fact that we were basically lying to the
user, this was also causing problems with inferiors which handle SIGSEGV by themselves, since
LLDB was unable to reinject this signal back into the inferior.
This commit changes LLGS to report SIGSEGV as a signal. This has necessitated some changes in the
test-suite, which had previously used eStopReasonException to locate threads that crashed. Now it
uses platform-specific logic, which in the case of linux searches for eStopReasonSignaled with
signal=SIGSEGV.
I have also added the ability to set the description of StopInfoUnixSignal using the description
field of the gdb-remote packet. The linux stub uses this to display additional information about
the segfault (invalid address, address access protected, etc.).
Test Plan: All tests pass on linux and osx.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg, emaste
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10057
llvm-svn: 238549
Remove the m_description ivar from the StopInfoBreakpoint
and StopInfoWatchpoint subclasses of StopInfo. Also,
initialize the m_description ivar in the StopInfo ctor.
<rdar://problem/20902950>
llvm-svn: 237411
The OperatingSystem plug-ins allow code to detect threads in memory and then say "memory thread 0x11111" is backed by the actual thread 1.
You can then single step these virtual threads. A problem arose when thread specific breakpoints were used during thread plans where we would say "set a breakpoint on thread 0x11111" and we would hit the breakpoint on the real thread 1 and the thread IDs wouldn't match and we would get rid of the "stopped at breakpoint" stop info due to this mismatch. Code was added to ensure these events get forwarded and thus allow single stepping a memory thread to work correctly.
Added a test case for this as well.
<rdar://problem/19211770>
llvm-svn: 234364
Debugger.h is a huge file that gets included everywhere, and
FormatManager.h brings in a ton of unnecessary stuff and doesn't
even use anything from it in the header.
llvm-svn: 231161
the hit count is not updated.
Also, keep the hit count for the breakpoint in the breakpoint. We were
using just the sum of the location's hit counts, but that was wrong since if a shared library is
unloaded, and the location goes away, the breakpoint hit count should not suddenly drop
by the number of hits there were on that location.
llvm-svn: 226074
BreakpointLocation::ShouldStop. That worked but wasn't really right,
since there's nothing to guarantee that won't get called more than
once. So this change moves that responsibility to the StopInfoBreakpoint
directly, and then it uses the BreakpointSite to actually do the bumping.
Also fix a test case that was assuming if you had many threads running some
code with a breakpoint in it, the hit count when you stopped would always be
1. Many of the threads could have hit it at the same time...
<rdar://problem/18577603>
llvm-svn: 220358
There were many issues with synchronous mode that we discovered when started to try and add a "batch" mode. There was a race condition where the event handling thread might consume events when in sync mode and other times the Process::WaitForProcessToStop() would consume them. This also led to places where the Process IO handler might or might not get popped when it needed to be.
llvm-svn: 220254
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D5592
This patch gives LLDB some ability to interact with AddressSanitizer runtime library, on top of what we already have (historical memory stack traces provided by ASan). Namely, that's the ability to stop on an error caught by ASan, and access the report information that are associated with it. The report information is also exposed into SB API.
More precisely this patch...
adds a new plugin type, InstrumentationRuntime, which should serve as a generic superclass for other instrumentation runtime libraries, these plugins get notified when modules are loaded, so they get a chance to "activate" when a specific dynamic library is loaded
an instance of this plugin type, AddressSanitizerRuntime, which activates itself when it sees the ASan dynamic library or founds ASan statically linked in the executable
adds a collection of these plugins into the Process class
AddressSanitizerRuntime sets an internal breakpoint on __asan::AsanDie(), and when this breakpoint gets hit, it retrieves the report information from ASan
this breakpoint is then exposed as a new StopReason, eStopReasonInstrumentation, with a new StopInfo subclass, InstrumentationRuntimeStopInfo
the StopInfo superclass is extended with a m_extended_info field (it's a StructuredData::ObjectSP), that can hold arbitrary JSON-like data, which is the way the new plugin provides the report data
the "thread info" command now accepts a "-s" flag that prints out the JSON data of a stop reason (same way the "-j" flag works now)
SBThread has a new API, GetStopReasonExtendedInfoAsJSON, which dumps the JSON string into a SBStream
adds a test case for all of this
I plan to also get rid of the original ASan plugin (memory history stack traces) and use an instance of AddressSanitizerRuntime for that purpose.
Kuba
llvm-svn: 219546
Add a callback that will allow an expression to be cancelled between the
expression evaluation stages (for the ClangUserExpressions.)
<rdar://problem/16790467>, <rdar://problem/16573440>
llvm-svn: 207944
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
Cleaned up ClangUserExpression::Evaluate() to have only one variant that takes a "const EvaluateExpressionOptions& options" instead of taking many arguments.
The "--debug" option is designed to allow you to debug your expression by stopping at the first instruction (it enables --ignore-breakpoints=true and --unwind-on-error=false) and allowing you to step through your JIT code. It needs to be more integrated with the thread plan, so I am checking this in so Jim Ingham can make it happen.
llvm-svn: 194009
plan providers from a "ThreadPlan *" to a "lldb::ThreadPlanSP". That was needed to fix
a bug where the ThreadPlanStepInRange wasn't checking with its sub-plans to make sure they
succeed before trying to proceed further. If the sub-plan failed and as a result didn't make
any progress, you could end up retrying the same failing algorithm in an infinite loop.
<rdar://problem/14043602>
llvm-svn: 186618
ensure that the watchpoint not the step is reported as the stop reason. Also, stash away & restore
the current stop reason just so it can't go away on us.
llvm-svn: 185474
value. This fixes problems, for instance, with the StepRange plans, where they know that
they explained the stop because they were at their "run to here" breakpoint, then deleted
that breakpoint, so when they got asked again, doh! I had done this for a couple of plans
in an ad hoc fashion, this just formalizes it.
Also add a "ResumeRequested" in Process so that the code in the completion handlers can
tell the ShouldStop logic they want to resume rather than just directly resuming. That allows
us to handle resuming in a more controlled fashion.
Also, SetPublicState can take a "restarted" flag, so that it doesn't drop the run lock when
the target was immediately restarted.
--This line, and those below , will be ignored--
M test/lang/objc/objc-dynamic-value/TestObjCDynamicValue.py
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadList.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanStepOut.h
M include/lldb/Target/Thread.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanBase.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanStepThrough.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanStepInstruction.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanStepInRange.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanStepOverBreakpoint.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanStepUntil.h
M include/lldb/Target/StopInfo.h
M include/lldb/Target/Process.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanRunToAddress.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlan.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanCallFunction.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanStepOverRange.h
M source/Plugins/LanguageRuntime/ObjC/AppleObjCRuntime/AppleThreadPlanStepThroughObjCTrampoline.h
M source/Plugins/LanguageRuntime/ObjC/AppleObjCRuntime/AppleThreadPlanStepThroughObjCTrampoline.cpp
M source/Target/StopInfo.cpp
M source/Target/Process.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanRunToAddress.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlan.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanCallFunction.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanStepOverRange.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadList.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanStepOut.cpp
M source/Target/Thread.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanBase.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanStepThrough.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanStepInstruction.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanStepInRange.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanStepOverBreakpoint.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanStepUntil.cpp
M lldb.xcodeproj/xcshareddata/xcschemes/Run Testsuite.xcscheme
llvm-svn: 181381
Most important was a new[] + delete mismatch in ScanFormatDescriptor()
and a couple of possible memory leaks in FileSpec::EnumerateDirectory().
llvm-svn: 181080
Previously, the options for a breakopint or its
locations stored only the text of the breakpoint
condition (ironically, they used ClangUserExpression
as a glorified std::string) and, each time the condition
had to be evaluated in the StopInfo code, the expression
parser would be invoked via a static method to parse and
then execute the expression.
I made several changes here:
- Each breakpoint location now has its own
ClangUserExpressionSP containing a version of
the breakpoint expression compiled for that exact
location.
- Whenever the breakpoint is hit, the breakpoint
condition expression is simply re-run to determine
whether to stop.
- If the process changes (e.g., it's re-run) or
the source code of the expression changes (we use
a hash so as to avoid doing string comparisons)
the ClangUserExpressionSP is re-generated.
This should improve performance of breakpoint
conditions significantly, and takes advantage of
the recent expression re-use work.
llvm-svn: 179838
could delete the other locations, and that would leave us iterating over a reduced size collection and crash.
<rdar://problem/13592544>
llvm-svn: 179332
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
hitting auto-continue signals while running a thread plan would cause us to lose control of the debug
session.
<rdar://problem/12993641>
llvm-svn: 174793
Add the ability to give breakpoints a "kind" string, and have the StopInfoBreakpoint
print that in the brief description if set. Also print the kind - if set - in the breakpoint
listing.
Give kinds to a bunch of the internal breakpoints.
We were deleting the Mac OS X dynamic loader breakpoint as though the id we had stored away was
a breakpoint site ID, but in fact it was a breakpoint id, so we never actually deleted it. Fixed that.
llvm-svn: 173555
controlled by the --unwind-on-error flag, and --ignore-breakpoint which separately controls behavior when a called
function hits a breakpoint. For breakpoints, we don't unwind, we either stop, or ignore the breakpoint, which makes
more sense.
Also make both these behaviors globally settable through "settings set".
Also handle the case where a breakpoint command calls code that ends up re-hitting the breakpoint. We were recursing
and crashing. Now we just stop without calling the second command.
<rdar://problem/12986644>
<rdar://problem/9119325>
llvm-svn: 172503
- add new header lldb-python.h to be included before other system headers
- short term fix (eventually python dependencies must be cleaned up)
Patch by Matt Kopec!
llvm-svn: 169341
it to print the old and new values.
Temporarily disable the "out of scope" checking since it didn't work correctly, and was
not what people generally expected watchpoints to be doing.
llvm-svn: 166472