Commit Graph

136 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Johnny Chen 1cf107c433 Patch from Filipe Cabecinhas!
Attached is a small python fix to save the current stout and std err when starting a python session, then diverting them (as it was before), and restoring the previous values afterwards. Otherwise, a python script could suddenly find itself without output.

llvm-svn: 151693
2012-02-29 01:52:13 +00:00
Enrico Granata d3d444f811 This patch provides a set of formatters for most of the commonly used Cocoa classes.
The formatter for NSString is an improved version of the one previously shipped as an example, the others are new in design and implementation.
A more robust and OO-compliant Objective-C runtime wrapper is provided for runtime versions 1 and 2 on 32 and 64 bit.
The formatters are contained in a category named "AppKit", which is not enabled at startup.

llvm-svn: 151299
2012-02-23 23:10:03 +00:00
Greg Clayton 1ac04c3088 Thread hardening part 3. Now lldb_private::Thread objects have std::weak_ptr
objects for the backlink to the lldb_private::Process. The issues we were
running into before was someone was holding onto a shared pointer to a 
lldb_private::Thread for too long, and the lldb_private::Process parent object
would get destroyed and the lldb_private::Thread had a "Process &m_process"
member which would just treat whatever memory that used to be a Process as a
valid Process. This was mostly happening for lldb_private::StackFrame objects
that had a member like "Thread &m_thread". So this completes the internal
strong/weak changes.

Documented the ExecutionContext and ExecutionContextRef classes so that our
LLDB developers can understand when and where to use ExecutionContext and 
ExecutionContextRef objects.

llvm-svn: 151009
2012-02-21 00:09:25 +00:00
Greg Clayton cc4d0146b4 This checking is part one of trying to add some threading safety to our
internals. The first part of this is to use a new class:

lldb_private::ExecutionContextRef

This class holds onto weak pointers to the target, process, thread and frame
and it also contains the thread ID and frame Stack ID in case the thread and
frame objects go away and come back as new objects that represent the same
logical thread/frame. 

ExecutionContextRef objcets have accessors to access shared pointers for
the target, process, thread and frame which might return NULL if the backing
object is no longer available. This allows for references to persistent program
state without needing to hold a shared pointer to each object and potentially
keeping that object around for longer than it needs to be. 

You can also "Lock" and ExecutionContextRef (which contains weak pointers)
object into an ExecutionContext (which contains strong, or shared pointers)
with code like

ExecutionContext exe_ctx (my_obj->GetExectionContextRef().Lock());

llvm-svn: 150801
2012-02-17 07:49:44 +00:00
Enrico Granata 061858ce61 <rdar://problem/10062621>
New public API for handling formatters: creating, deleting, modifying categories, and formatters, and managing type/formatter association.
This provides SB classes for each of the main object types involved in providing formatter support:
 SBTypeCategory
 SBTypeFilter
 SBTypeFormat
 SBTypeSummary
 SBTypeSynthetic
plus, an SBTypeNameSpecifier class that is used on the public API layer to abstract the notion that formatters can be applied to plain type-names as well as to regular expressions
For naming consistency, this patch also renames a lot of formatters-related classes.
Plus, the changes in how flags are handled that started with summaries is now extended to other classes as well. A new enum (lldb::eTypeOption) is meant to support this on the public side.
The patch also adds several new calls to the formatter infrastructure that are used to implement by-index accessing and several other design changes required to accommodate the new API layer.
An architectural change is introduced in that backing objects for formatters now become writable. On the public API layer, CoW is implemented to prevent unwanted propagation of changes.
Lastly, there are some modifications in how the "default" category is constructed and managed in relation to other categories.

llvm-svn: 150558
2012-02-15 02:34:21 +00:00
Greg Clayton 402230e633 Added support to SBType for getting template arguments from a SBType:
uint32_t
SBType::GetNumberOfTemplateArguments ();

lldb::SBType
SBType::GetTemplateArgumentType (uint32_t idx);

lldb::TemplateArgumentKind
SBType::GetTemplateArgumentKind (uint32_t idx);

Some lldb::TemplateArgumentKind values don't have a corresponding SBType
that will be returned from SBType::GetTemplateArgumentType(). This will
help our data formatters do their job by being able to find out the
type of template params and do smart things with those.

llvm-svn: 149658
2012-02-03 01:30:30 +00:00
Greg Clayton 6b2bd93918 Added many more python convenience accessors:
You can now access a frame in a thread using:

lldb.SBThread.frame[int] -> lldb.SBFrame object for a frame in a thread

Where "int" is an integer index. You can also access a list object with all of
the frames using:

lldb.SBThread.frames => list() of lldb.SBFrame objects

All SB objects that give out SBAddress objects have properties named "addr"

lldb.SBInstructionList now has the following convenience accessors for len() and
instruction access using an index:

insts = lldb.frame.function.instructions
for idx in range(len(insts)):
    print insts[idx]
    
Instruction lists can also lookup an isntruction using a lldb.SBAddress as the key:

pc_inst = lldb.frame.function.instructions[lldb.frame.addr]

lldb.SBProcess now exposes:

lldb.SBProcess.is_alive => BOOL Check if a process is exists and is alive
lldb.SBProcess.is_running => BOOL check if a process is running (or stepping):
lldb.SBProcess.is_running => BOOL check if a process is currently stopped or crashed:
lldb.SBProcess.thread[int] => lldb.SBThreads for a given "int" zero based index
lldb.SBProcess.threads => list() containing all lldb.SBThread objects in a process

SBInstruction now exposes:
lldb.SBInstruction.mnemonic => python string for instruction mnemonic
lldb.SBInstruction.operands => python string for instruction operands
lldb.SBInstruction.command => python string for instruction comment

SBModule now exposes:

lldb.SBModule.uuid => uuid.UUID(), an UUID object from the "uuid" python module
lldb.SBModule.symbol[int] => lldb.Symbol, lookup symbol by zero based index
lldb.SBModule.symbol[str] => list() of lldb.Symbol objects that match "str"
lldb.SBModule.symbol[re] => list() of lldb.Symbol objecxts that match the regex
lldb.SBModule.symbols => list() of all symbols in a module

  
SBAddress objects can now access the current load address with the "lldb.SBAddress.load_addr"
property. The current "lldb.target" will be used to try and resolve the load address.

Load addresses can also be set using this accessor:

addr = lldb.SBAddress()
addd.load_addr = 0x123023

Then you can check the section and offset to see if the address got resolved.

SBTarget now exposes:

lldb.SBTarget.module[int] => lldb.SBModule from zero based module index
lldb.SBTarget.module[str] => lldb.SBModule by basename or fullpath or uuid string
lldb.SBTarget.module[uuid.UUID()] => lldb.SBModule whose UUID matches
lldb.SBTarget.module[re] => list() of lldb.SBModule objects that match the regex
lldb.SBTarget.modules => list() of all lldb.SBModule objects in the target

SBSymbol now exposes:

lldb.SBSymbol.name => python string for demangled symbol name
lldb.SBSymbol.mangled => python string for mangled symbol name or None if there is none
lldb.SBSymbol.type => lldb.eSymbolType enum value
lldb.SBSymbol.addr => SBAddress object that represents the start address for this symbol (if there is one)
lldb.SBSymbol.end_addr => SBAddress for the end address of the symbol  (if there is one)
lldb.SBSymbol.prologue_size => pythin int containing The size of the prologue in bytes
lldb.SBSymbol.instructions => SBInstructionList containing all instructions for this symbol

SBFunction now also has these new properties in addition to what is already has:
lldb.SBFunction.addr => SBAddress object that represents the start address for this function
lldb.SBFunction.end_addr => SBAddress for the end address of the function
lldb.SBFunction.instructions => SBInstructionList containing all instructions for this function

SBFrame now exposes the SBAddress for the frame:
lldb.SBFrame.addr => SBAddress which is the section offset address for the current frame PC

These are all in addition to what was already added. Documentation and website
updates coming soon.

llvm-svn: 149489
2012-02-01 08:09:32 +00:00
Enrico Granata bac45f610d This commit provides a new default summary for Objective-C boolean variables, which shows YES or NO instead of the character value. A new category named objc is added to contain this summary provider. Any future Objective-C related formatters would probably fit here
llvm-svn: 149388
2012-01-31 17:01:51 +00:00
Greg Clayton e1cd1be6d6 Switching back to using std::tr1::shared_ptr. We originally switched away
due to RTTI worries since llvm and clang don't use RTTI, but I was able to 
switch back with no issues as far as I can tell. Once the RTTI issue wasn't
an issue, we were looking for a way to properly track weak pointers to objects
to solve some of the threading issues we have been running into which naturally
led us back to std::tr1::weak_ptr. We also wanted the ability to make a shared 
pointer from just a pointer, which is also easily solved using the 
std::tr1::enable_shared_from_this class. 

The main reason for this move back is so we can start properly having weak
references to objects. Currently a lldb_private::Thread class has a refrence
to its parent lldb_private::Process. This doesn't work well when we now hand
out a SBThread object that contains a shared pointer to a lldb_private::Thread
as this SBThread can be held onto by external clients and if they end up
using one of these objects we can easily crash.

So the next task is to start adopting std::tr1::weak_ptr where ever it makes
sense which we can do with lldb_private::Debugger, lldb_private::Target,
lldb_private::Process, lldb_private::Thread, lldb_private::StackFrame, and
many more objects now that they are no longer using intrusive ref counted
pointer objects (you can't do std::tr1::weak_ptr functionality with intrusive
pointers).

llvm-svn: 149207
2012-01-29 20:56:30 +00:00
Greg Clayton 037f9fda5a Stop running so many individual commands when going into the script interpreter.
All of the commands now get globbed into a single line.

lldb.target, lldb.process, lldb.thread and lldb.frame now get initialized with
empty SBTarget, SBProcess, SBThread and SBFrame objects when they don't contain
anything. 

llvm-svn: 149166
2012-01-28 02:11:02 +00:00
Greg Clayton 9ea3fcd845 <rdar://problem/10750012>
Remove a pseudo terminal master open and slave file descriptor that was being
used for pythong stdin. It was not hooked up correctly and was causing file
descriptor leaks.

llvm-svn: 149098
2012-01-27 00:13:27 +00:00
Greg Clayton 1a0be3b1f2 <rdar://problem/10649734>
Fixed an issue where the python interpreter could deadlock LLDB.

llvm-svn: 147640
2012-01-06 00:47:38 +00:00
Enrico Granata 0a305db796 this patch addresses several issues with "command script" subcommands:
a) adds a new --synchronicity (-s) setting for "command script add" that allows the user to decide if scripted commands should run synchronously or asynchronously (which can make a difference in how events are handled)
 b) clears up several error messages
 c) adds a new --allow-reload (-r) setting for "command script import" that allows the user to reload a module even if it has already been imported before
 d) allows filename completion for "command script import" (much like what happens for "target create")
 e) prevents "command script add" from replacing built-in commands with scripted commands
 f) changes AddUserCommand() to take an std::string instead of a const char* (for performance reasons)
plus, it fixes an issue in "type summary add" command handling which caused several test suite errors

llvm-svn: 144035
2011-11-07 22:57:04 +00:00
Greg Clayton dce502ede0 Fixed the Xcode project building of LLVM to be a bit more user friendly:
- If you download and build the sources in the Xcode project, x86_64 builds
  by default using the "llvm.zip" checkpointed LLVM.
- If you delete the "lldb/llvm.zip" and the "lldb/llvm" folder, and build the
  Xcode project will download the right LLVM sources and build them from 
  scratch
- If you have a "lldb/llvm" folder already that contains a "lldb/llvm/lib"
  directory, we will use the sources you have placed in the LLDB directory.
  
Python can now be disabled for platforms that don't support it. 

Changed the way the libllvmclang.a files get used. They now all get built into
arch specific directories and never get merged into universal binaries as this
was causing issues where you would have to go and delete the file if you wanted
to build an extra architecture slice.

llvm-svn: 143678
2011-11-04 03:34:56 +00:00
Enrico Granata 47c6f6d43d Decoupling of lock-related code from the core of ScriptInterpreterPython. All that concerns locking the Python interpreter is now delegated to the internal ScriptInterpreterPython::Locker class. Several changes in ScriptInterpreterPython to accommodate this new pattern.
llvm-svn: 142802
2011-10-24 17:22:21 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 1695466fe3 Move Python.h includes out of the headers into the .cpp file where it's actually used.
Python.h includes a ton of macros that can cause weird behavior down the road.

llvm-svn: 142754
2011-10-23 16:49:03 +00:00
Greg Clayton 81c22f6104 Moved lldb::user_id_t values to be 64 bit. This was going to be needed for
process IDs, and thread IDs, but was mainly needed for for the UserID's for
Types so that DWARF with debug map can work flawlessly. With DWARF in .o files
the type ID was the DIE offset in the DWARF for the .o file which is not
unique across all .o files, so now the SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap class will
make the .o file index part (the high 32 bits) of the unique type identifier
so it can uniquely identify the types.

llvm-svn: 142534
2011-10-19 18:09:39 +00:00
Enrico Granata a9dbf4325e this patch introduces a new command script import command which takes as input a filename for a Python script and imports the module contained in that file. the containing directory is added to the Python path such that dependencies are honored. also, the module may contain an __lldb_init_module(debugger,dict) function, which gets called after importing, and which can somehow initialize the module's interaction with lldb
llvm-svn: 142283
2011-10-17 21:45:27 +00:00
Greg Clayton c14ee32db5 Converted the lldb_private::Process over to use the intrusive
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
2011-09-22 04:58:26 +00:00
Jason Molenda ca0e3fa325 One last printf-style call cleanup.
llvm-svn: 140205
2011-09-20 23:23:44 +00:00
Jason Molenda fd54b368ea Update declarations for all functions/methods that accept printf-style
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
2011-09-20 21:44:10 +00:00
Greg Clayton 4d122c4009 Adopt the intrusive pointers in:
lldb_private::Breakpoint
lldb_private::BreakpointLocations
lldb_private::BreakpointSite
lldb_private::Debugger
lldb_private::StackFrame
lldb_private::Thread
lldb_private::Target

llvm-svn: 139985
2011-09-17 08:33:22 +00:00
Enrico Granata bac233511d Fixing an issue with Python commands defined interactively
llvm-svn: 139345
2011-09-09 01:41:30 +00:00
Enrico Granata 9128ee2f7a Redesign of the interaction between Python and frozen objects:
- introduced two new classes ValueObjectConstResultChild and ValueObjectConstResultImpl: the first one is a ValueObjectChild obtained from
   a ValueObjectConstResult, the second is a common implementation backend for VOCR and VOCRCh of method calls meant to read through pointers stored
   in frozen objects ; now such reads transparently move from host to target as required
 - as a consequence of the above, removed code that made target-memory copies of expression results in several places throughout LLDB, and also
   removed code that enabled to recognize an expression result VO as such
 - introduced a new GetPointeeData() method in ValueObject that lets you read a given amount of objects of type T from a VO
   representing a T* or T[], and doing dereferences transparently
   in private layer it returns a DataExtractor ; in public layer it returns an instance of a newly created lldb::SBData
 - as GetPointeeData() does the right thing for both frozen and non-frozen ValueObject's, reimplemented ReadPointedString() to use it
   en lieu of doing the raw read itself
 - introduced a new GetData() method in ValueObject that lets you get a copy of the data that backs the ValueObject (for pointers,
   this returns the address without any previous dereferencing steps ; for arrays it actually reads the whole chunk of memory)
   in public layer this returns an SBData, just like GetPointeeData()
 - introduced a new CreateValueFromData() method in SBValue that lets you create a new SBValue from a chunk of data wrapped in an SBData
   the limitation to remember for this kind of SBValue is that they have no address: extracting the address-of for these objects (with any
   of GetAddress(), GetLoadAddress() and AddressOf()) will return invalid values
 - added several tests to check that "p"-ing objects (STL classes, char* and char[]) will do the right thing
Solved a bug where global pointers to global variables were not dereferenced correctly for display
New target setting "max-string-summary-length" gives the maximum number of characters to show in a string when summarizing it, instead of the hardcoded 128
Solved a bug where the summary for char[] and char* would not be shown if the ValueObject's were dumped via the "p" command
Removed m_pointers_point_to_load_addrs from ValueObject. Introduced a new m_address_type_of_children, which each ValueObject can set to tell the address type
 of any pointers and/or references it creates. In the current codebase, this is load address most of the time (the only notable exception being file
 addresses that generate file address children UNLESS we have a live process)
Updated help text for summary-string
Fixed an issue in STL formatters where std::stlcontainer::iterator would match the container's synthetic children providers
Edited the syntax and help for some commands to have proper argument types

llvm-svn: 139160
2011-09-06 19:20:51 +00:00
Jim Ingham a6c422b7de Don't change the host's environment, just append our Python Directory
directly to the one in sys.

llvm-svn: 138693
2011-08-27 01:24:08 +00:00
Jim Ingham 586b0bd8bd Don't let Python write its .pyc files, that's not really polite...
llvm-svn: 138262
2011-08-22 19:10:09 +00:00
Enrico Granata def5391ae5 - Support for Python namespaces:
If you have a Python module foo, in order to use its contained objects in LLDB you do not need to use
  'from foo import *'. You can use 'import foo', and then refer to items in foo as 'foo.bar', and LLDB
  will know how to resolve bar as a member of foo.
  Accordingly, GNU libstdc++ formatters have been moved from the global namespace to gnu_libstdcpp and a few
  test cases are also updated to reflect the new convention. Python docs suggest using a plain 'import' en lieu of
  'from-import'.

llvm-svn: 138244
2011-08-22 17:34:47 +00:00
Enrico Granata 274fd6e965 Fixed some SWIG interoperability issues
llvm-svn: 138154
2011-08-19 23:56:34 +00:00
Enrico Granata 58ad33440a Taking care of an issue with using lldb_private types in SBCommandInterpreter.cpp ; Making NSString test case work on Snow Leopard ; Removing an unused variable warning
llvm-svn: 138105
2011-08-19 21:56:10 +00:00
Enrico Granata c482a19294 First round of code cleanups:
- all instances of "vobj" have been renamed to "valobj"
 - class Debugger::Formatting has been renamed to DataVisualization (defined in FormatManager.h/cpp)
   The interface to this class has not changed
 - FormatCategory now uses ConstString's as keys to the navigators instead of repeatedly casting
   from ConstString to const char* and back all the time
   Next step is making the same happen for categories themselves
 - category gnu-libstdc++ is defined in the constructor for a FormatManager
   The source code for it is defined in gnu_libstdcpp.py, drawn from examples/synthetic at compile time
   All references to previous 'osxcpp' name have been removed from both code and file names
Functional changes:
 - the name of the option to use a summary string for 'type summary add' has changed from the previous --format-string
   to the new --summary-string. It is expected that the short option will change from -f to -s, and -s for --python-script
   will become -o

llvm-svn: 137886
2011-08-17 22:13:59 +00:00
Enrico Granata 217f91fc57 New category "gnu-libstdc++" provides summary for std::string and synthetic children for types std::map, std::list and std::vector
The category is enabled by default. If you run into issues with it, disable it and the previous behavior of LLDB is restored
 ** This is a temporary solution. The general solution to having formatters pulled in at startup should involve going through the Platform.
Fixed an issue in type synthetic list where a category with synthetic providers in it was not shown if all the providers were regex-based

llvm-svn: 137850
2011-08-17 19:07:52 +00:00
Enrico Granata 99f0b8f935 When defining a scripted command, it is possible to provide a docstring and that will be used as the help text for the command
If no docstring is provided, a default help text is created
LLDB will refuse to create scripted commands if the scripting language is anything but Python
Some additional comments in AppleObjCRuntimeV2.cpp to describe the memory layout expected by the dynamic type lookup code

llvm-svn: 137801
2011-08-17 01:30:04 +00:00
Enrico Granata 223383ed6c Changes to Python commands:
- They now have an SBCommandReturnObject instead of an SBStream as third argument
 - The class CommandObjectPythonFunction has been merged into CommandObjectCommands.cpp
 - The command to manage them is now:
  command script with subcommands add, list, delete, clear
   command alias is returned to its previous functionality
 - Python commands are now part of an user dictionary, instead of being seen as aliases
 

llvm-svn: 137785
2011-08-16 23:24:13 +00:00
Enrico Granata be93a35a8a Python commands:
It is now possible to use 'command alias --python' to define a command name that actually triggers execution of a Python function
 (e.g. command alias --python foo foo_impl makes a command named 'foo' that runs Python function 'foo_impl')
 The Python function foo_impl should have as signature: def foo_impl(debugger, args, stream, dict): where
  debugger is an object wrapping an LLDB SBDebugger
  args is the command line arguments, as an unparsed Python string
  stream is an SBStream that represents the standard output
  dict is an internal utility parameter and should be left untouched
 The function should return None on no error, or an error string to describe any problems

llvm-svn: 137722
2011-08-16 16:49:25 +00:00
Johnny Chen 0a76c28a87 To silence the static analyzer.
llvm-svn: 137329
2011-08-11 19:17:45 +00:00
Enrico Granata 6f3533fb1d Public API changes:
- Completely new implementation of SBType
 - Various enhancements in several other classes
Python synthetic children providers for std::vector<T>, std::list<T> and std::map<K,V>:
 - these return the actual elements into the container as the children of the container
 - basic template name parsing that works (hopefully) on both Clang and GCC
 - find them in examples/synthetic and in the test suite in functionalities/data-formatter/data-formatter-python-synth
New summary string token ${svar :
 - the syntax is just the same as in ${var but this new token lets you read the values
   coming from the synthetic children provider instead of the actual children
 - Python providers above provide a synthetic child len that returns the number of elements
   into the container
Full bug fix for the issue in which getting byte size for a non-complete type would crash LLDB
Several other fixes, including:
 - inverted the order of arguments in the ClangASTType constructor
 - EvaluationPoint now only returns SharedPointer's to Target and Process
 - the help text for several type subcommands now correctly indicates argument-less options as such

llvm-svn: 136504
2011-07-29 19:53:35 +00:00
Enrico Granata c53114e30a new flag -P to type synth add lets you type a Python class interactively
added a final newline to fooSynthProvider.py
new option to automatically save user input in InputReaderEZ
checking for NULL pointers in several new places

llvm-svn: 135916
2011-07-25 16:59:05 +00:00
Enrico Granata a37a065c33 Python synthetic children:
- you can now define a Python class as a synthetic children producer for a type
   the class must adhere to this "interface":
        def __init__(self, valobj, dict):
     	def get_child_at_index(self, index):
     	def get_child_index(self, name):
   then using type synth add -l className typeName
   (e.g. type synth add -l fooSynthProvider foo)
   (This is still WIP with lots to be added)
   A small test case is available also as reference

llvm-svn: 135865
2011-07-24 00:14:56 +00:00
Enrico Granata f2bbf717f7 Python summary strings:
- you can use a Python script to write a summary string for data-types, in one of
   three ways:
    -P option and typing the script a line at a time
    -s option and passing a one-line Python script
    -F option and passing the name of a Python function
   these options all work for the "type summary add" command
   your Python code (if provided through -P or -s) is wrapped in a function
   that accepts two parameters: valobj (a ValueObject) and dict (an LLDB
   internal dictionary object). if you use -F and give a function name,
   you're expected to define the function on your own and with the right
   prototype. your function, however defined, must return a Python string
 - test case for the Python summary feature
 - a few quirks:
  Python summaries cannot have names, and cannot use regex as type names
  both issues will be fixed ASAP
major redesign of type summary code:
 - type summary working with strings and type summary working with Python code
   are two classes, with a common base class SummaryFormat
 - SummaryFormat classes now are able to actively format objects rather than
   just aggregating data
 - cleaner code to print descriptions for summaries
the public API now exports a method to easily navigate a ValueObject hierarchy
New InputReaderEZ and PriorityPointerPair classes
Several minor fixes and improvements

llvm-svn: 135238
2011-07-15 02:26:42 +00:00
Caroline Tice d61c10bc79 Add 'batch_mode' to CommandInterpreter. Modify InputReaders to
not write output (prompts, instructions,etc.) if the CommandInterpreter
is in batch_mode.

Also, finish updating InputReaders to write to the asynchronous stream,
rather than using the Debugger's output file directly.

llvm-svn: 133162
2011-06-16 16:27:19 +00:00
Caroline Tice c1338e8d38 Add error message; clean up comment.
llvm-svn: 132997
2011-06-14 16:36:12 +00:00
Caroline Tice 1f499bc039 Cleaning up the Python script interpreter: Use the
embedded_interpreter.py file rather than keeping it
all in a string and compiling the string (easier to maintain,
easier to read, remove redundancy).

llvm-svn: 132935
2011-06-13 21:33:00 +00:00
Caroline Tice c928f59c90 Use Py_InitializeEx(0) instead of Py_Initialize,
to prevent Python from installing its own signal 
handlers.

llvm-svn: 132492
2011-06-02 22:09:43 +00:00
Caroline Tice e67afe15b4 Pre-load the Python script interpreter with the following
convenience variables (from the ExecutionContext) each time
it is entered: lldb.debugger, lldb.target, lldb.process, 
lldb.thread, lldb.frame.

If a frame (or thread, process, etc) does not currently exist,
the variable contains the Python value 'None'.

llvm-svn: 130792
2011-05-03 21:21:50 +00:00
Caroline Tice 969ed3d10f This patch captures and serializes all output being written by the
command line driver, including the lldb prompt being output by
editline, the asynchronous process output & error messages, and
asynchronous messages written by target stop-hooks.

As part of this it introduces a new Stream class,
StreamAsynchronousIO.  A StreamAsynchronousIO object is created with a
broadcaster, who will eventually broadcast the stream's data for a
listener to handle, and an event type indicating what type of event
the broadcaster will broadcast.  When the Write method is called on a
StreamAsynchronousIO object, the data is appended to an internal
string.  When the Flush method is called on a StreamAsynchronousIO
object, it broadcasts it's data string and clears the string.

Anything in lldb-core that needs to generate asynchronous output for
the end-user should use the StreamAsynchronousIO objects.

I have also added a new notification type for InputReaders, to let
them know that a asynchronous output has been written. This is to
allow the input readers to, for example, refresh their prompts and
lines, if desired.  I added the case statements to all the input
readers to catch this notification, but I haven't added any code for
handling them yet (except to the IOChannel input reader).

llvm-svn: 130721
2011-05-02 20:41:46 +00:00
Greg Clayton fc36f79170 Abtracted the innards of lldb-core away from the SB interface. There was some
overlap in the SWIG integration which has now been fixed by introducing
callbacks for initializing SWIG for each language (python only right now).
There was also a breakpoint command callback that called into SWIG which has
been abtracted into a callback to avoid cross over as well.

Added a new binary: lldb-platform

This will be the start of the remote platform that will use as much of the 
Host functionality to do its job so it should just work on all platforms.
It is pretty hollowed out for now, but soon it will implement a platform
using the GDB remote packets as the transport.

llvm-svn: 128053
2011-03-22 01:14:58 +00:00
Johnny Chen 24e99aa833 Minor typo fix and TAB removals.
llvm-svn: 127439
2011-03-11 00:28:50 +00:00
Caroline Tice c288e8ca0c Add some explanatory comments.
llvm-svn: 127438
2011-03-11 00:21:55 +00:00
Caroline Tice 6258c53e12 Add thread state initialization to the thread where the interactive
interpreter is run (which is separate from the thread where
Py_Initialize is called, where this normally gets set up).

llvm-svn: 127191
2011-03-07 23:24:28 +00:00
Greg Clayton 51b1e2d271 Use Host::File in lldb_private::StreamFile and other places to cleanup host
layer a bit more.

llvm-svn: 125149
2011-02-09 01:08:52 +00:00
Greg Clayton 2da6d49523 Patch that allows for thread_t to be something more complex than an
integer. Modified patch from Kirk Beitz.

llvm-svn: 125067
2011-02-08 01:34:25 +00:00
Greg Clayton a3406614e0 Abtract terminal stuff into a new lldb_private::Terminal class
where the implementation is hidden in the host layer. This avoids
a slew of "#if LLDB_CONFIG_TERMIOS_SUPPORTED" statements in the
code and keeps things cleaner.

llvm-svn: 125057
2011-02-07 23:24:47 +00:00
Greg Clayton 6c3e431e9b More termios fixes. We need to currently make sure to include:
#include "lldb/Host/Config.h"

Or the LLDB_CONFIG_TERMIOS_SUPPORTED defined won't be set. I will fix all
of this Termios stuff later today by moving lldb/Core/TTYState.* into the 
host layer and then we conditionalize all of this inside TTYState.cpp and
then we get rid of LLDB_CONFIG_TERMIOS_SUPPORTED all together.

Typically, when we start to see too many "#if LLDB_CONFIG_XXXX" preprocessor
directives, this is a good indicator that something needs to be moved over to
the host layer. TTYState can be modified to do all of the things that many
areas of the code are currently doing, and it will avoid all of the 
preprocessor noise.

llvm-svn: 125027
2011-02-07 19:22:32 +00:00
Greg Clayton cdd074fbc7 More termios fixes from Kirk Beitz.
llvm-svn: 125024
2011-02-07 19:04:58 +00:00
Greg Clayton 95e314260e Header patch, virtual dtor patch and missed UUID patch from Kirk Beitz.
llvm-svn: 124931
2011-02-05 02:56:16 +00:00
Caroline Tice eb5cfe4f2b Fix exit instructions for interactive interpreter, now that ctrl-D works.
llvm-svn: 124811
2011-02-03 20:08:40 +00:00
Greg Clayton 645bf5420d Added support for some new environment variables within LLDB to enable some
extra launch options:

LLDB_LAUNCH_FLAG_DISABLE_ASLR disables ASLR for all launched processes

LLDB_LAUNCH_FLAG_DISABLE_STDIO will disable STDIO (reroute to "/dev/null")
for all launched processes

LLDB_LAUNCH_FLAG_LAUNCH_IN_TTY will force all launched processes to be
launched in new terminal windows.

Also, don't init python if we never create a script interpreter.

llvm-svn: 124341
2011-01-27 01:01:10 +00:00
Greg Clayton 1a65ae11bd Enabled extra warnings and fixed a bunch of small issues.
llvm-svn: 124250
2011-01-25 23:55:37 +00:00
Caroline Tice 6760a51739 Replace Mutex guarding python interpreter access with Predicate,
allowing timeouts & informing the user when the lock is unavailable.


Fixed problem where Debugger::Terminate was clearing the debugger list
even when the global ref count was greater than zero.

llvm-svn: 123674
2011-01-17 21:55:19 +00:00
Caroline Tice 8f5b2eb1e2 Recent modifications to the Python script interpreter caused some problems
when handling one-liner commands that contain escaped characters.  In
order to deal with the new namespace/dictionary stuff, the command was
being embedded within a second string, which messed up the escaping.

This fixes the problem by handling one-liners in a different manner, so they
no longer need to be embedded within another string, and can still be
processed in the proper namespace/dictionary context.

llvm-svn: 123467
2011-01-14 21:09:29 +00:00
Caroline Tice 2f88aadff1 Split up the Python script interpreter code to allow multiple script interpreter objects to
exist within the same process (one script interpreter object per debugger object).  The
python script interpreter objects are all using the same global Python script interpreter;
they use separate dictionaries to keep their data separate, and mutex's to prevent any object
attempting to use the global Python interpreter when another object is already using it.

llvm-svn: 123415
2011-01-14 00:29:16 +00:00
Caroline Tice a51174af72 Add termination instructions when entering the interactive script interpreter.
llvm-svn: 121884
2010-12-15 19:51:12 +00:00
Caroline Tice efed613172 Add the ability to catch and do the right thing with Interrupts (often control-c)
and end-of-file (often control-d).

llvm-svn: 119837
2010-11-19 20:47:54 +00:00
Caroline Tice 5c2816d903 Move the embedded Python interpreter onto a separate thread, to prevent
main thread from having to wait on it (which was causing some I/O 
hangs).

llvm-svn: 118700
2010-11-10 19:18:14 +00:00
Caroline Tice 3cc8751d59 Remove references to particular Python version (use the system default
version);  change include statements to use Python.h in the Python framework
on Mac OS X systems; leave it using regular Python.h on other systems.

Note:  I think this *ought* to work properly on Linux systems, but I don't have
a system to test it on...

llvm-svn: 117612
2010-10-28 21:51:20 +00:00
Caroline Tice 04a339a084 Flush the prompts immediately in the breakpoint command input readers, to make
sure they come out at the correct times.

llvm-svn: 117470
2010-10-27 18:34:42 +00:00
Caroline Tice dc8f777f6b Prevent Python script interpreter initialization from changing
the termios settings on the debugger's input handle.

llvm-svn: 116725
2010-10-18 18:24:17 +00:00
Greg Clayton dd36defda7 Added a new Host call to find LLDB related paths:
static bool
    Host::GetLLDBPath (lldb::PathType path_type, FileSpec &file_spec);
    
This will fill in "file_spec" with an appropriate path that is appropriate
for the current Host OS. MacOSX will return paths within the LLDB.framework,
and other unixes will return the paths they want. The current PathType
enums are:

typedef enum PathType
{
    ePathTypeLLDBShlibDir,          // The directory where the lldb.so (unix) or LLDB mach-o file in LLDB.framework (MacOSX) exists
    ePathTypeSupportExecutableDir,  // Find LLDB support executable directory (debugserver, etc)
    ePathTypeHeaderDir,             // Find LLDB header file directory
    ePathTypePythonDir              // Find Python modules (PYTHONPATH) directory
} PathType;

All places that were finding executables are and python paths are now updated
to use this Host call.

Added another new host call to launch the inferior in a terminal. This ability
will be very host specific and doesn't need to be supported on all systems.
MacOSX currently will create a new .command file and tell Terminal.app to open
the .command file. It also uses the new "darwin-debug" app which is a small
app that uses posix to exec (no fork) and stop at the entry point of the 
program. The GDB remote plug-in is almost able launch a process and attach to
it, it currently will spawn the process, but it won't attach to it just yet.
This will let LLDB not have to share the terminal with another process and a
new terminal window will pop up when you launch. This won't get hooked up
until we work out all of the kinks. The new Host function is:

    static lldb::pid_t
    Host::LaunchInNewTerminal (
        const char **argv,   // argv[0] is executable
        const char **envp,
        const ArchSpec *arch_spec,
        bool stop_at_entry,
        bool disable_aslr);

Cleaned up FileSpec::GetPath to not use strncpy() as it was always zero 
filling the entire path buffer.

Fixed an issue with the dynamic checker function where I missed a '$' prefix
that should have been added.

llvm-svn: 116690
2010-10-17 22:03:32 +00:00
Greg Clayton c6ed542c90 More SWIG cleanup. Moved the breakpoint callback function back to the
ScriptInterpreterPython class and made a simple callback function that
ScriptInterpreterPython::BreakpointCallbackFunction() now calls so we don't
include any internal API stuff into the cpp file that is generated by SWIG.

Fixed a few build warnings in debugserver.

llvm-svn: 115926
2010-10-07 17:14:24 +00:00
Caroline Tice 988efc1ba2 Fix one-liner Python breakpoint commands to be wrapped up in an automatically
generated Python function, and passed the stoppoint context frame and
bp_loc as parameters.

llvm-svn: 114894
2010-09-27 21:35:15 +00:00
Caroline Tice 18474c933c Automatically wrap *all* Python code entered for a breakpoint command inside
an auto-generated Python function, and pass the stoppoint context frame and
breakpoint location as parameters to the function (named 'frame' and 'bp_loc'),
to be used inside the breakpoint command Python code, if desired.

llvm-svn: 114849
2010-09-27 18:00:20 +00:00
Caroline Tice 867b185d8d Update help text for breakpoint command one-liners.
Fix minor bug in 'commands alias'; alias commands can now handle command options 
and arguments in the same alias.  Also fixes problem that disallowed "process launch --" as
an alias.

Fix typo in comment in Python script interpreter.

llvm-svn: 114499
2010-09-21 23:25:40 +00:00
Caroline Tice 650b92683a Re-write/clean up code that generated Python breakpoint commands.
Add a warning if no command was attached to the breakpoint.
Update the help slightly.

llvm-svn: 114467
2010-09-21 19:25:28 +00:00
Greg Clayton a701509229 Fixed the way set/show variables were being accessed to being natively
accessed by the objects that own the settings. The previous approach wasn't
very usable and made for a lot of unnecessary code just to access variables
that were already owned by the objects.

While I fixed those things, I saw that CommandObject objects should really
have a reference to their command interpreter so they can access the terminal
with if they want to output usaage. Fixed up all CommandObjects to take
an interpreter and cleaned up the API to not need the interpreter to be
passed in.

Fixed the disassemble command to output the usage if no options are passed
down and arguments are passed (all disassebmle variants take options, there
are no "args only").

llvm-svn: 114252
2010-09-18 01:14:36 +00:00
Caroline Tice e7e92b771a Remove help text that is no longer correct.
Fix Python script interpreter to not fail when the Debugger does
not have input/output file handles.

llvm-svn: 113880
2010-09-14 22:49:06 +00:00
Johnny Chen 4550154d31 Fixed some comments.
llvm-svn: 113673
2010-09-11 00:23:59 +00:00
Johnny Chen 94de55d5c2 Added the capability to specify a one-liner Python script as the callback
command for a breakpoint, for example:

(lldb) breakpoint command add -p 1 "conditional_break.stop_if_called_from_a()"

The ScriptInterpreter interface has an extra method:

    /// Set a one-liner as the callback for the breakpoint command.
    virtual void 
    SetBreakpointCommandCallback (CommandInterpreter &interpreter,
                                  BreakpointOptions *bp_options,
                                  const char *oneliner);

to accomplish the above.

Also added a test case to demonstrate lldb's use of breakpoint callback command
to stop at function c() only when its immediate caller is function a().  The
following session shows the user entering the following commands:

1) command source .lldb (set up executable, breakpoint, and breakpoint command)
2) run (the callback mechanism will skip two breakpoints where c()'s immeidate caller is not a())
3) bt (to see that indeed c()'s immediate caller is a())
4) c (to continue and finish the program)

test/conditional_break $ ../../build/Debug/lldb
(lldb) command source .lldb
Executing commands in '.lldb'.
(lldb) file a.out
Current executable set to 'a.out' (x86_64).
(lldb) breakpoint set -n c
Breakpoint created: 1: name = 'c', locations = 1
(lldb) script import sys, os
(lldb) script sys.path.append(os.path.join(os.getcwd(), os.pardir))
(lldb) script import conditional_break
(lldb) breakpoint command add -p 1 "conditional_break.stop_if_called_from_a()"
(lldb) run
run
Launching '/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/trunk/test/conditional_break/a.out'  (x86_64)
(lldb) Checking call frames...
Stack trace for thread id=0x2e03 name=None queue=com.apple.main-thread:
  frame #0: a.out`c at main.c:39
  frame #1: a.out`b at main.c:34
  frame #2: a.out`a at main.c:25
  frame #3: a.out`main at main.c:44
  frame #4: a.out`start
c called from b
Continuing...
Checking call frames...
Stack trace for thread id=0x2e03 name=None queue=com.apple.main-thread:
  frame #0: a.out`c at main.c:39
  frame #1: a.out`b at main.c:34
  frame #2: a.out`main at main.c:47
  frame #3: a.out`start
c called from b
Continuing...
Checking call frames...
Stack trace for thread id=0x2e03 name=None queue=com.apple.main-thread:
  frame #0: a.out`c at main.c:39
  frame #1: a.out`a at main.c:27
  frame #2: a.out`main at main.c:50
  frame #3: a.out`start
c called from a
Stopped at c() with immediate caller as a().
a(1) returns 4
b(2) returns 5
Process 20420 Stopped
* thread #1: tid = 0x2e03, 0x0000000100000de8 a.out`c + 7 at main.c:39, stop reason = breakpoint 1.1, queue = com.apple.main-thread
  36   	
  37   	int c(int val)
  38   	{
  39 ->	    return val + 3;
  40   	}
  41   	
  42   	int main (int argc, char const *argv[])
(lldb) bt
bt
thread #1: tid = 0x2e03, stop reason = breakpoint 1.1, queue = com.apple.main-thread
  frame #0: 0x0000000100000de8 a.out`c + 7 at main.c:39
  frame #1: 0x0000000100000dbc a.out`a + 44 at main.c:27
  frame #2: 0x0000000100000e4b a.out`main + 91 at main.c:50
  frame #3: 0x0000000100000d88 a.out`start + 52
(lldb) c
c
Resuming process 20420
Process 20420 Exited
a(3) returns 6
(lldb) 

llvm-svn: 113596
2010-09-10 18:21:10 +00:00
Johnny Chen d0211cc657 Don't flatten lldb and import everything into the global namespace. Instead,
set the debugger_unique_id with the lldb prefix.

llvm-svn: 113589
2010-09-10 16:19:10 +00:00
Johnny Chen 705c3b6aaa There is no need to restore (sys.stdin, sys.stdout) of the python script
interpreter right before calling Py_Finalize().  This also fixed the crash as
reported in rdar://problem/8252903.

llvm-svn: 110731
2010-08-10 21:26:55 +00:00
Johnny Chen 7dc2e4784e We can do better when reporting the status of one-liner script execution.
Change the prototype of ScriptInterpreter::ExecuteOneLine() to return bool
instead of void and take one additional parameter as CommandReturnObject *.

Propagate the status of one-liner execution back appropriately.

llvm-svn: 109899
2010-07-30 22:33:14 +00:00
Greg Clayton a624358728 Added some comments to clarify where "init_lldb" comes from.
llvm-svn: 107801
2010-07-07 18:40:03 +00:00
Caroline Tice ebc1bb277c Add a unique ID to each debugger instance.
Add functions to look up debugger by id
Add global variable to lldb python module, to hold debugger id
Modify embedded Python interpreter to update the global variable with the
 id of its current debugger.
Modify the char ** typemap definition in lldb.swig to accept 'None' (for NULL)
 as a valid value.

The point of all this is so that, when you drop into the embedded interpreter
from the command interpreter (or when doing Python-based breakpoint commands),
there is a way for the Python side to find/get the correct debugger
instance ( by checking debugger_unique_id, then calling 
SBDebugger::FindDebuggerWithID  on it).

llvm-svn: 107287
2010-06-30 16:22:25 +00:00
Greg Clayton 6611103cfe Very large changes that were needed in order to allow multiple connections
to the debugger from GUI windows. Previously there was one global debugger
instance that could be accessed that had its own command interpreter and
current state (current target/process/thread/frame). When a GUI debugger
was attached, if it opened more than one window that each had a console
window, there were issues where the last one to setup the global debugger
object won and got control of the debugger.

To avoid this we now create instances of the lldb_private::Debugger that each 
has its own state:
- target list for targets the debugger instance owns
- current process/thread/frame
- its own command interpreter
- its own input, output and error file handles to avoid conflicts
- its own input reader stack

So now clients should call:

    SBDebugger::Initialize(); // (static function)

    SBDebugger debugger (SBDebugger::Create());
    // Use which ever file handles you wish
    debugger.SetErrorFileHandle (stderr, false);
    debugger.SetOutputFileHandle (stdout, false);
    debugger.SetInputFileHandle (stdin, true);

    // main loop
    
    SBDebugger::Terminate(); // (static function)
    
SBDebugger::Initialize() and SBDebugger::Terminate() are ref counted to
ensure nothing gets destroyed too early when multiple clients might be
attached.

Cleaned up the command interpreter and the CommandObject and all subclasses
to take more appropriate arguments.

llvm-svn: 106615
2010-06-23 01:19:29 +00:00
Jason Molenda b1823404c3 Committing patch from Joseph Ranieri to handle 'exit()' the same
as 'quit()' in the python script environment.

llvm-svn: 105756
2010-06-09 21:56:00 +00:00
Eli Friedman d0edb5b4a8 Don't include Python.h in the shared header.
llvm-svn: 105737
2010-06-09 18:31:38 +00:00
Chris Lattner 30fdc8d841 Initial checkin of lldb code from internal Apple repo.
llvm-svn: 105619
2010-06-08 16:52:24 +00:00