On darwin, if child process of process being debugged dies due to mach exception, the debugged process will die.
debugserver now only handles the mach exceptions for the task being debugged.
llvm-svn: 152291
from a process and hooked it up to the new packet that was recently added
to our GDB remote executable named debugserver. Now Process has the following
new calls:
virtual Error
Process::GetMemoryRegionInfo (lldb::addr_t load_addr, MemoryRegionInfo &range_info);
virtual uint32_t
GetLoadAddressPermissions (lldb::addr_t load_addr);
Only the first one needs to be implemented by subclasses that can add this
support.
Cleaned up the way the new packet was implemented in debugserver to be more
useful as an API inside debugserver. Also found an error where finding a region
for an address actually will pick up the next region that follows the address
in the query so we also need ot make sure that the address we requested the
region for falls into the region that gets returned.
llvm-svn: 144976
Add a more general purpose qMemoryRegionInfo packet which can
describe various attributes about a memory region. Currently it
will return the start address, size, and permissions (read, write,
executable) for the memory region. It may be possible to add
additional attributes in the future such as whether the region is
designated as stack memory or jitted code a la vmmap.
I still haven't implemented the lldb side of the code to use this
packet yet so there may be unexpected behavior - but the basic implementation looks
about right. I'll hook it up to lldb soon and fix any problems that crop up.
llvm-svn: 144175
whether a given address is in an executable region of memory or
not. I haven't written the lldb side that will use this packet it
hasn't been tested yet but it's a simple enough bit of code.
I want to have this feature available for the unwinder code. When
we're stopped at an address with no valid symbol context, there are
a number of questions I'd like to ask --
is the current pc value in an executable region (e.g. did they
jump to unallocated/unexecutable memory? we know how to unwind
from here if so.)
Is the stack pointer or the frame pointer the correct register
to use to find the caller's saved pc value?
Once we're past the first frame we can trust things like eh_frame
and ABI unwind schemes but the first frame is challenging and having
a way to check potential addresses to see if they're executable or
not would help narrow down the possibilities a lot.
llvm-svn: 144074
suspended, we would call "int ::task_resume (task_t task);" as many times as
it took to resume the task which isn't what we want to do.
llvm-svn: 116674
launch it due to not being able to get the task port. A SIGHUP was killing us
and also an error string wasn't properly being passed along. Got rid of a
class error variable that can only lead to multi-threaded crashes.
llvm-svn: 109930