This reverts commit 82a3883715.
The original version had a copy-paste error: using the Interrupt timeout
for the ResumeSynchronous wait, which is clearly wrong. This error would
have been evident with real use, but the interrupt is long enough that it
only caused one testsuite failure (in the Swift fork).
Anyway, I found that mistake and fixed it and checked all the other places
where I had to plumb through a timeout, and added a test with a short
interrupt timeout stepping over a function that takes 3x the interrupt timeout
to complete, so that should detect a similar mistake in the future.
Refactor SetCurrentThread() and SetCurrentThreadForRun() to reduce code
duplication and simplify it. Both methods now call common
SendSetCurrentThreadPacket() that implements the common protocol
exchange part (the only variable is sending `Hg` vs `Hc`) and returns
the selected TID. The logic is rewritten to use a StreamString
instead of snprintf().
A side effect of the change is that thread-id sent is now zero-padded.
However, this should not have practical impact on the server as both
forms are equivalent.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100459
These were disabled in 473a3a773e
because they failed on 32 bit platforms. (Arm for sure but I assume
any 32 bit)
This was due to the printf formatter used. These assumed
that types like uint64_t/size_t would be certain size/type and
that changes on 32 bit.
Instead use "z" to print the size_t and PRI<...> formatters
for the addr_t (always uint64_t) and the int32_t.
This adds GDB client support for the qMemTags packet
which reads memory tags. Following the design
which was recently committed to GDB.
https://sourceware.org/gdb/current/onlinedocs/gdb/General-Query-Packets.html#General-Query-Packets
(look for qMemTags)
lldb commands will use the new Process methods
GetMemoryTagManager and ReadMemoryTags.
The former takes a range and checks that:
* The current process architecture has an architecture plugin
* That plugin provides a MemoryTagManager
* That the range of memory requested lies in a tagged range
(it will expand it to granules for you)
If all that was true you get a MemoryTagManager you
can give to ReadMemoryTags.
This two step process is done to allow commands to get the
tag manager without having to read tags as well. For example
you might just want to remove a logical tag, or error early
if a range with tagged addresses is inverted.
Note that getting a MemoryTagManager doesn't mean that the process
or a specific memory range is tagged. Those are seperate checks.
Having a tag manager just means this architecture *could* have
a tagging feature enabled.
An architecture plugin has been added for AArch64 which
will return a MemoryTagManagerAArch64MTE, which was added in a
previous patch.
Reviewed By: omjavaid
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95602
This adds the MemoryTagManager class and a specialisation
of that class for AArch64 MTE tags. It provides a generic
interface for various tagging operations.
Adding/removing tags, diffing tagged pointers, etc.
Later patches will use this manager to handle memory tags
in generic code in both lldb and lldb-server.
Since it will be used in both, the base class header is in
lldb/Target.
(MemoryRegionInfo is another example of this pattern)
Reviewed By: omjavaid
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97281
This adds a basic SB API for creating and stopping traces.
Note: This doesn't add any APIs for inspecting individual instructions. That'd be a more complicated change and it might be better to enhande the dump functionality to output the data in binary format. I'll leave that for a later diff.
This also enhances the existing tests so that they test the same flow using both the command interface and the SB API.
I also did some cleanup of legacy code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103500
This reverts commit bd5751f3d2.
This patch series is causing us to every so often miss switching
the state from eStateRunning to eStateStopped when we get the stop
packet from the debug server.
Reverting till I can figure out how that could be happening.
ProcessGDBRemote plugin layers.
Also fix a bug where if we tried to interrupt, but the ReadPacket
wakeup timer woke us up just after the timeout, we would break out
the switch, but then since we immediately check if the response is
empty & fail if it is, we could end up actually only giving a
small interval to the interrupt.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102085
This implements the interactive trace start and stop methods.
This diff ended up being much larger than I anticipated because, by doing it, I found that I had implemented in the beginning many things in a non optimal way. In any case, the code is much better now.
There's a lot of boilerplate code due to the gdb-remote protocol, but the main changes are:
- New tracing packets: jLLDBTraceStop, jLLDBTraceStart, jLLDBTraceGetBinaryData. The gdb-remote packet definitions are quite comprehensive.
- Implementation of the "process trace start|stop" and "thread trace start|stop" commands.
- Implementaiton of an API in Trace.h to interact with live traces.
- Created an IntelPTDecoder for live threads, that use the debugger's stop id as checkpoint for its internal cache.
- Added a functionality to stop the process in case "process tracing" is enabled and a new thread can't traced.
- Added tests
I have some ideas to unify the code paths for post mortem and live threads, but I'll do that in another diff.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91679
Introduce a minimal support for the 32-bit powerpc platform. This
includes support for GPR and FPR registers. I also needed to add
software breakpoint opcode for PPC32/PPC64 (big endian), and to fix
offsets in RegisterInfos_powerpc.h (used only by FreeBSD register
context to be globally unique rather than relative to each struct).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95947
Introduce mips64 support to match the legacy FreeBSD plugin. Similarly
to the legacy plugin, the code does not support FPU registers at the
moment. The support for them will be submitted separately as it
requires changes to the register context shared by both plugins.
This also includes software single-stepping support that is moved from
the Linux plugin into a common Utility class. The FreeBSD code also
starts explicitly ignoring EINVAL from PT_CLEARSTEP since this is easier
to implement than checking whether hardware single-stepping were used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95802
Introduce a NativeRegisterContextFreeBSD for 32-bit ARM platform.
This includes support for GPR + VFP registers as exposed by FreeBSD's
ptrace(2) API. Hardware breakpoints or watchpoints are not supported
due to missing kernel support. The code is roughly based on the arm64
context.
It also includes an override for GetSoftwareBreakpointTrapOpcode() based
on the matching code in the PlatformFreeBSD plugin.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95696
Introduce arm64 support in the FreeBSDRemote plugin. The code
is roughly based on Linux and reuses the same POSIX RegisterInfos
(but the buffers need to be a few bytes larger due to stricter struct
member alignment in FreeBSD structures -- luckily, they do not affect
the actual member offsets). It supports reading and writing
general-purpose and FPU registers. SVE and hardware watchpoint support
is missing due to the limitations of FreeBSD ptrace(2) API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95297
When a program maps one of its own modules for reading, and then
crashes, breakpad can emit two entries for that module in the
ModuleList. We have logic to identify this case by checking permissions
on mapped memory regions and report just the module with an executable
region. As currently written, though, the check is asymmetric -- the
entry with the executable region must be the second one encountered for
the preference to kick in.
This change makes the logic symmetric, so that the first-encountered
module will similarly be preferred if it has an executable region but
the second-encountered module does not. This happens for example when
the module in question is the executable itself, which breakpad likes to
report first -- we need to ignore the other entry for that module when
we see it later, even though it may be mapped at a lower virtual
address.
Reviewed By: clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94629
TargetList::CreateTarget automatically adds created target to the list, however,
CommandObjectTargetCreate does some additional preparation after creating a target
and which can fail. The command should remove created target if it failed. Since
the function has many ways to return, scope guard does this work safely.
Changes to the TargetList make target adding and selection more transparent.
Other changes remove unnecessary SetSelectedTarget after CreateTarget.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93052
Extract remote debugging logic from PlatformMacOSX and move it into
PlatformRemoteMacOSX so it can benefit from all the logic necessary for
remote debugging.
Until now, remote macOS debugging was treated almost identical to local
macOS debugging. By moving in into its own class, we can have it inherit
from PlatformRemoteDarwinDevice and all the functionality it provides,
such as looking at the correct DeviceSupport directory.
rdar://68167374
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92452
Previously if you did:
$ lldb-server platform --server <...> --min-gdbserver-port 12346
--max-gdbserver-port 12347
(meaning only use port 12346 for gdbservers)
Then tried to launch two gdbservers on the same connection,
the second one would return port 65535. Which is a real port
number but it actually means lldb-server didn't find one it was
allowed to use.
send packet: $qLaunchGDBServer;<...>
read packet: $pid:1919;port:12346;#c0
<...>
send packet: $qLaunchGDBServer;<...>
read packet: $pid:1927;port:65535;#c7
This situation should be an error even if port 65535 does happen
to be available on the current machine.
To fix this make PortMap it's own class within
GDBRemoteCommunicationServerPlatform.
This almost the same as the old typedef but for
GetNextAvailablePort() returning an llvm::Expected.
This means we have to handle not finding a port,
by returning an error packet.
Also add unit tests for this new PortMap class.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91634
Translate between abridged and full ftag values in order to expose
the latter in the gdb-remote protocol while the former are used by
FXSAVE/XSAVE... This matches the gdb behavior.
The Shell/Register tests now rely on the new behavior, and therefore
are run on non-Darwin systems only. The Python (API) test relies
on the legacy behavior, and is run on Darwin only.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91504
This extends the "memory region" command to
show tagged regions on AArch64 Linux when the MTE
extension is enabled.
(lldb) memory region the_page
[0x0000fffff7ff8000-0x0000fffff7ff9000) rw-
memory tagging: enabled
This is done by adding an optional "flags" field to
the qMemoryRegion packet. The only supported flag is
"mt" but this can be extended.
This "mt" flag is read from /proc/{pid}/smaps on Linux,
other platforms will leave out the "flags" field.
Where this "mt" flag is received "memory region" will
show that it is enabled. If it is not or the target
doesn't support memory tagging, the line is not shown.
(since majority of the time tagging will not be enabled)
Testing is added for the existing /proc/{pid}/maps
parsing and the new smaps parsing.
Minidump parsing has been updated where needed,
though it only uses maps not smaps.
Target specific tests can be run with QEMU and I have
added MTE flags to the existing helper scripts.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87442
Translate between abridged and full ftag values in order to expose
the latter in the gdb-remote protocol while the former are used by
FXSAVE/XSAVE... This matches the gdb behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91504
The FXSAVE/XSAVE data can have two different layouts on x86_64. When
called as FXSAVE/XSAVE..., the Instruction Pointer and Address Pointer
registers are reported using a 16-bit segment identifier and a 32-bit
offset. When called as FXSAVE64/XSAVE64..., they are reported using
a complete 64-bit offsets instead.
LLDB has historically followed GDB and unconditionally used to assume
the 32-bit layout, with the slight modification of possibly
using a 32-bit segment register (i.e. extending the register into
the reserved 16 upper bits). When the underlying operating system used
FXSAVE64/XSAVE64..., the pointer was split into two halves,
with the upper half repored as the segment registers. While
reconstructing the full address was possible on the user end (and e.g.
the FPU register tests did that), it certainly was not the most
convenient option.
Introduce a two additional 'fip' and 'fdp' registers that overlap
with 'fiseg'/'fioff' and 'foseg'/'foff' respectively, and report
the complete 64-bit address.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91497
Use offset-based method to access x86 debug registers. This also
involves adding a test for the correctness of these offsets, and making
GetDR() method of NativeRegisterContextWatchpoint_x86 public to avoid
duplicate code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91268
Use offset-based method to access base x87 FPU registers, using offsets
relative to the position of 'struct FPR', as determined by the location
of first register in it (fctrl). Change m_fpr to use a fixed-size array
matching FXSAVE size (512 bytes). Add unit tests for verifying
RegisterInfo offsets and sizes against the FXSAVE layout.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91248
Read and write registers from m_gpr using offsets from RegisterInfo
rather than explicit switch-case. This eliminates a lot of redundant
code, and avoids mistakes such as type mismatches seen recently (wrt
segment registers). The same logic will be extended to other register
sets in the future.
Make m_gpr an uint8_t std::array to ease accesses. Ideally, we could
avoid including <machine/reg.h> entirely in the future and instead
get the correct GPR size from Utility/RegisterContextFreeBSD_* somehow.
While at it, modify register set logic to use an explicit enum with
llvm::Optional<>, making the code cleaner and at the same time enabling
compiler warnings for unhandled sets.
Since now we're fully relying on 'struct GPR' defined
in Utility/RegisterContextFreeBSD_* being entirely in sync with
the system structure, add unit tests to verify the field offsets
and sizes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91216
Buildbot failed on Windows
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/#/builders/83/builds/693
Error: On Windows, std::future can't hold an Expected, as it doesn't have a default
constructor.
Solution: Use std::future<bool> instead of std::future<Expected<T>>
Depends on D89283.
The goal of this packet (jTraceGetSupportedType) is to be able to query the gdb-server for the tracing technology that can work for the current debuggeer, which can make the user experience simpler but allowing the user to simply type
thread trace start
to start tracing the current thread without even telling the debugger to use "intel-pt", for example. Similarly, `thread trace start [args...]` would accept args beloging to the working trace type.
Also, if the user typed
help thread trace start
We could directly show the help information of the trace type that is supported for the target, or mention instead that no tracing is supported, if that's the case.
I added some simple tests, besides, when I ran this on my machine with intel-pt support, I got
$ process plugin packet send "jTraceSupportedType"
packet: jTraceSupportedType
response: {"description":"Intel Processor Trace","pluginName":"intel-pt"}
On a machine without intel-pt support, I got
$ process plugin packet send "jTraceSupportedType"
packet: jTraceSupportedType
response: E00;
Reviewed By: clayborg, labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90490
This is essentially a replacement for the PacketUnimplementedError
previously present in the gdb-remote server code.
The reason I am introducing a generic error is because I wanted the
native process classes to be able to signal that they do not support
some functionality. They could not use PacketUnimplementedError as they
are independent of a specific transport protocol. Putting the error
class in the the native process code was also not ideal because the
gdb-remote code is also used for lldb-server's platform mode, which does
not (should not) know how to debug individual processes.
I'm putting it under Utility, as I think it can be generally useful for
notifying about unsupported/unimplemented functionality (and in
particular, for programatically testing whether something is
unsupported).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89121
Breakpad creates minidump files that can a module loaded multiple times. We found that when a process mmap's the object file for a library, this can confuse breakpad into creating multiple modules in the module list. This patch fixes the GetFilteredModules() to check the linux maps for permissions and use the one that has execute permissions. Typically when people mmap a file into memory they don't map it as executable. This helps people to correctly load minidump files for post mortem analysis.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86375
This patch is a big sed to rename the following variables:
s/PYTHON_LIBRARIES/Python3_LIBRARIES/g
s/PYTHON_INCLUDE_DIRS/Python3_INCLUDE_DIRS/g
s/PYTHON_EXECUTABLE/Python3_EXECUTABLE/g
s/PYTHON_RPATH/Python3_RPATH/g
I've also renamed the CMake module to better express its purpose and for
consistency with FindLuaAndSwig.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85976
Encountered the following situation: Let we started thread T1 and it hit
breakpoint on B1 location. We suspended T1 and continued the process.
Then we started thread T2 which hit for example the same location B1.
This time in a breakpoint callback we decided not to stop returning
false.
Expected result: process continues (as if T2 did not hit breakpoint) its
workflow with T1 still suspended. Actual result: process do stops (as if
T2 callback returned true).
Solution: We need invalidate StopInfo for threads that was previously
suspended just because something that is already inactive can not be the
reason of stop. Thread::GetPrivateStopInfo() may be appropriate place to
do it, because it gets called (through Thread::GetStopInfo()) every time
before process reports stop and user gets chance to change
m_resume_state again i.e if we see m_resume_state == eStateSuspended
it definitely means it was set during previous stop and it also means
this thread can not be stopped again (cos' it was frozen during
previous stop).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80112
Summary:
This packet is necessary to make lldb work with the remote-gdb stub in
user mode qemu when running position-independent binaries. It reports
the relative position (load bias) of the loaded executable wrt. the
addresses in the file itself.
Lldb needs to know this information in order to correctly set the load
address of the executable. Normally, lldb would be able to find this out
on its own by following the breadcrumbs in the process auxiliary vector,
but we can't do this here because qemu does not support the
qXfer:auxv:read packet.
This patch does not implement full scope of the qOffsets packet (it only
supports packets with identical code, data and bss offsets), because it
is not fully clear how should the different offsets be handled and I am
not aware of a producer which would make use of this feature (qemu will
always
<https://github.com/qemu/qemu/blob/master/linux-user/elfload.c#L2436>
return the same value for code and data offsets). In fact, even gdb
ignores the offset for the bss sections, and uses the "data" offset
instead. So, until the we need more of this packet, I think it's best
to stick to the simplest solution possible. This patch simply rejects
replies with non-uniform offsets.
Reviewers: clayborg, jasonmolenda
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74598
LLDB has a few different styles of header guards and they're not very
consistent because things get moved around or copy/pasted. This patch
unifies the header guards across LLDB and converts everything to match
LLVM's style.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74743
This has the same behavior as converting std::string_view to
std::string. This is an expensive conversion, so explicit conversions
are helpful for avoiding unneccessary string copies.
This is how it should've been and brings it more in line with
std::string_view. There should be no functional change here.
This is mostly mechanical from a custom clang-tidy check, with a lot of
manual fixups. It uncovers a lot of minor inefficiencies.
This doesn't actually modify StringRef yet, I'll do that in a follow-up.
Summary:
A *.cpp file header in LLDB (and in LLDB) should like this:
```
//===-- TestUtilities.cpp -------------------------------------------------===//
```
However in LLDB most of our source files have arbitrary changes to this format and
these changes are spreading through LLDB as folks usually just use the existing
source files as templates for their new files (most notably the unnecessary
editor language indicator `-*- C++ -*-` is spreading and in every review
someone is pointing out that this is wrong, resulting in people pointing out that this
is done in the same way in other files).
This patch removes most of these inconsistencies including the editor language indicators,
all the different missing/additional '-' characters, files that center the file name, missing
trailing `===//` (mostly caused by clang-format breaking the line).
Reviewers: aprantl, espindola, jfb, shafik, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: dexonsmith, wuzish, emaste, sdardis, nemanjai, kbarton, MaskRay, atanasyan, arphaman, jfb, abidh, jsji, JDevlieghere, usaxena95, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73258
Summary:
Many of our tests need to initialize certain subsystems/plugins of LLDB such as
`FileSystem` or `HostInfo` by calling their static `Initialize` functions before the
test starts and then calling `::Terminate` after the test is done (in reverse order).
This adds a lot of error-prone boilerplate code to our testing code.
This patch adds a RAII called SubsystemRAII that ensures that we always call
::Initialize and then call ::Terminate after the test is done (and that the Terminate
calls are always in the reverse order of the ::Initialize calls). It also gets rid of
all of the boilerplate that we had for these calls.
Per-fixture initialization is still not very nice with this approach as it would
require some kind of static unique_ptr that gets manually assigned/reseted
from the gtest SetUpTestCase/TearDownTestCase functions. Because of that
I changed all per-fixture setup to now do per-test setup which can be done
by just having the SubsystemRAII as a member of the test fixture. This change doesn't
influence our normal test runtime as LIT anyway runs each test case separately
(and the Initialize/Terminate calls are anyway not very expensive). It will however
make running all tests in a single executable slightly slower.
Reviewers: labath, JDevlieghere, martong, espindola, shafik
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: mgorny, rnkovacs, emaste, MaskRay, abidh, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71630