have a certain name, not just the first. This
is useful if a class method and an instance
method have the same name.
<rdar://problem/14872081>
llvm-svn: 190008
Testing shows it works for at least trivial cases, while the
USE_STANDARD_JIT case does not even work for those. Thus, don't define
USE_STANDARD_JIT on FreeBSD.
I've left the #if block choosing the appropriate #include in case it's
useful for testing.
llvm-svn: 189611
live beyont parsing. This is important because
all the ClangASTImporter::Minions for a parser's
ASTContext are cleared when ClangExpressionDeclMap
is deleted.
This resolves many hard-to-reproduce crashes,
especially ones involving breakpoint conditions.
<rdar://problem/14775391>
llvm-svn: 189080
the extra check introduces 22 new test failures with the LLDB clang buildbot.
Note that the unhandled DWARF_OP codes in DWARFExpression::Evaluate don't cause test failures if the check is ignored.
llvm-svn: 187480
list have a shared pointer back to their DisassemblerLLVMC. This checkin force clears the InstructionList
in all the places we use the DisassemblerSP to stop the leaking for now. I'll go back and fix this
for real when I have time to do so.
<rdar://problem/14581918>
llvm-svn: 187473
in LLDB that load the canonical frame address rather than a location list.
- Handles the simple case where a CFA can be pulled from the current stack frame.
- Fixes more than one hundred failing tests with gcc 4.8!
TODO: Use UnwindPlan::GetRowForFunctionOffset if the DWARFExpression needs
to be evaluated in a context analogous to a virtual unwind (perhaps using RegisterContextLLDB).
- Also adds some comments to DWARFCallFrameInfo whenever I got confused.
llvm-svn: 187361
If we are replacing a function with the nobuiltin attribute, it may be called
with the builtin attribute on call sites. Remove any such attributes since it's
illegal to have a builtin call to something other than a nobuiltin function.
This fixes the current buildbot breakage (where LLDB crashes on
"expression new foo(42)").
llvm-svn: 186990
delete a constant after we replaced it with a
dynamically-computed value. Also ensured that we
replace all users of the constant if there are
multiple ones. Added a testcase.
<rdar://problem/14379043>
llvm-svn: 186363
write to registers if they were modified in the
expression. This eliminates spurious errors if
the register can't be written to but the
expression didn't write to it anyway.
Also improved error handling for the materializer
to make "couldn't materialize struct" errors more
informative.
<rdar://problem/14322579>
llvm-svn: 186228
A long time ago we start with clang types that were created by the symbol files and there were many functions in lldb_private::ClangASTContext that helped. Later we create ClangASTType which contains a clang::ASTContext and an opauque QualType, but we didn't switch over to fully using it. There were a lot of places where we would pass around a raw clang_type_t and also pass along a clang::ASTContext separately. This left room for error.
This checkin change all type code over to use ClangASTType everywhere and I cleaned up the interfaces quite a bit. Any code that was in ClangASTContext that was type related, was moved over into ClangASTType. All code that used these types was switched over to use all of the new goodness.
llvm-svn: 186130
- ObjectFile::GetSymtab() and ObjectFile::ClearSymtab() no longer takes any flags
- Module coordinates with the object files and contain a unified section list so that object file and symbol file can share sections when they need to, yet contain their own sections.
Other cleanups:
- Fixed Symbol::GetByteSize() to not have the symbol table compute the byte sizes on the fly
- Modified the ObjectFileMachO class to compute symbol sizes all at once efficiently
- Modified the Symtab class to store a file address lookup table for more efficient lookups
- Removed Section::Finalize() and SectionList::Finalize() as they did nothing
- Improved performance of the detection of symbol files that have debug maps by excluding stripped files and core files, debug files, object files and stubs
- Added the ability to tell if an ObjectFile has been stripped with ObjectFile::IsStripped() (used this for the above performance improvement)
llvm-svn: 185990
been suitable for preparing a single IR function
for operation in the target. However, using blocks
and lambdas creates other IR functions that also
need to be processed.
I have audited IRForTarget to make it process
multiple functions. Where IRForTarget would add
new instructions at the beginning of the main
expression function, it now adds them on-demand
in the function where they are needed. This is
enabled by a system of FunctionValueCaches, which
invoke a lambda to create or derive the values as
needed, or report the result of that lambda if it
has already been called for the given function.
<rdar://problem/14180236>
llvm-svn: 185224
has more than one function with a body. This
prevents declarations e.g. of blocks from being
passed to the IRInterpreter; they must pass
through to the JIT.
<rdar://problem/14180236>
llvm-svn: 185057
correctly. We have been getting lucky since most
expressions generate only one section (or the first
code section contains all the code), but sometimes
it actually matters.
<rdar://problem/14180236>
llvm-svn: 185054
bother checking if a region is safe to use. In
cases where regions need to be synthesized rather
than properly allocated, the memory reads required
to determine whether the area is used are
- insufficient, because intermediate locations
could be in use, and
- unsafe, because on some platforms reading from
memory can trigger events.
All this only makes a difference on platforms
where memory allocation in the target is impossible.
Behavior on platforms where it is possible should
stay the same.
<rdar://problem/14023970>
llvm-svn: 185046
dematerialization of registers that caused
conditional breakpoint expressions not to
work properly. Also added a testcase.
<rdar://problem/14129252>
llvm-svn: 184451
- Implemented the SExt instruction, and
- eliminated redundant codepaths for constant
handling.
Added test cases.
<rdar://problem/13244258>
<rdar://problem/13955820>
llvm-svn: 183344
live as long as they needed to. This led to
equality tests involving persistent variables
often failing or succeeding when they had no
business doing so.
To do this, I introduced the ability for a
memory allocation to "leak" - that is, to
persist in the process beyond the lifetime of
the expression. Hand-declared persistent
variables do this now.
<rdar://problem/13956311>
llvm-svn: 182528
Show variables that were in the debug info but optimized out. Also display a good error message when one of these variables get used in an expression.
llvm-svn: 182066
regions that aren't actually allocated in the
process. This cache is used by the expression
parser if the underlying process doesn't support
memory allocation, to avoid needless repeated
searches for unused address ranges.
Also fixed a silly bug in IRMemoryMap where it
would continue searching even after it found a
valid region.
<rdar://problem/13866629>
llvm-svn: 182028
to the DeclContext. This fulfils the contract that
we make with Clang by returning ELR_AlreadyLoaded.
This is a little aggressive in that it does not allow
the ASTImporter to import the child decls with any
lexical parent other than the Decl that reported them
as children.
<rdar://problem/13517713>
llvm-svn: 181498
support operands with vector types, it now reports
that it cannot interpret expressions that use
vector types. They get sent to the JIT instead.
<rdar://problem/13733651>
llvm-svn: 180899
mostly related to management of the stack frame
for the interpreter.
- First, if the expression can be interpreted,
allocate the stack frame in the target process
(to make sure pointers are valid) but only
read/write to the copy in the host's memory.
- Second, keep the memory allocations for the
stack frame and the materialized struct as
member variables of ClangUserExpression. This
avoids memory allocations and deallocations
each time the expression runs.
<rdar://problem/13043685>
llvm-svn: 180664
interpreter. They are a legacy from when the IR
interpreter didn't work with materialized values
but rather got values directly from
ClangExpressionDeclMap.
Also updated the #includes for IRInterpreter
accordingly.
llvm-svn: 180565
not find multiple functions with the same name but
different types. Now we keep track of what types
we've already reported for a function and only elide
functions if we've already reported a conflicting
one.
Also added a test case.
<rdar://problem/11367837>
llvm-svn: 180167
and persistent variables so that they are not
treated as remaining in the target process (i.e.,
having live data) when the process does not allow
persistent allocations (e.g., when there is no
process or in the case of kernel core files).
llvm-svn: 179919
variables in the ValueObject code:
- Report an error if the variable does not have
a valid address.
- Return the contents of the data to GetData(),
even if the value is constant.
<rdar://problem/13690855>
llvm-svn: 179876
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
and made attempts to allocate memory in the process
fall back to FindSpace and just allocate memory on
the host (but with real-looking pointers, hence
FindSpace) if the process doesn't allow allocation.
This allows expressions to run on processes that don't
support allocation, like core files.
This introduces an extremely rare potential problem:
If all of the following are true:
- The Process doesn't support allocation;
- the user writes an expression that refers to an
address that does not yet map to anything, or is
dynamically generated (e.g., the result of calling
a function); and
- the randomly-selected address for the static data
for that specific expression runs into the
address the user was expecting to work with;
then dereferencing the pointer later results
in the user seeing something unexpected. This is
unlikely but possible; as a future piece of work,
we should have processes be able to hint to the
expression parser where it can allocate temporary data
of this kind.
llvm-svn: 179827
expressions.
Previously, ClangUserExpression assumed that if
there was a constant result for an expression
then it could be determined during parsing. In
particular, the IRInterpreter ran while parser
state (in particular, ClangExpressionDeclMap)
was present. This approach is flawed, because
the IRInterpreter actually is capable of using
external variables, and hence the result might
be different each run. Until now, we papered
over this flaw by re-parsing the expression each
time we ran it.
I have rewritten the IRInterpreter to be
completely independent of the ClangExpressionDeclMap.
Instead of special-casing external variable lookup,
which ties the IRInterpreter closely to LLDB,
we now interpret the exact same IR that the JIT
would see. This IR assumes that materialization
has occurred; hence the recent implementation of the
Materializer, which does not require parser state
(in the form of ClangExpressionDeclMap) to be
present.
Materialization, interpretation, and dematerialization
are now all independent of parsing. This means that
in theory we can parse expressions once and run them
many times. I have three outstanding tasks before
shutting this down:
- First, I will ensure that all of this works with
core files. Core files have a Process but do not
allow allocating memory, which currently confuses
materialization.
- Second, I will make expression breakpoint
conditions remember their ClangUserExpression and
re-use it.
- Third, I will tear out all the redundant code
(for example, materialization logic in
ClangExpressionDeclMap) that is no longer used.
While implementing this fix, I also found a bug in
IRForTarget's handling of floating-point constants.
This should be fixed.
llvm-svn: 179801
will be gone soon!) that lets it interpret a function
using just an llvm::Module, an llvm::Function, and a
MemoryMap.
Also added an API to IRExecutionUnit to get at its
llvm::Function, so that the IRInterpreter can work
with it.
llvm-svn: 179704
a ClangExpressionDeclMap. Any functions that
require value resolution etc. fail if the
ClangExpressionDeclMap isn't present - which is
exactly what is desired.
llvm-svn: 179695
IRMemoryMap rather than through its own memory
abstraction. This considerably simplifies the
code, and makes it possible to run the
IRInterpreter multiple times on an already-parsed
expression in the absence of a ClangExpressionDeclMap.
Changes include:
- ClangExpressionDeclMap's interface methods
for the IRInterpreter now take IRMemoryMap
arguments. They are not long for this world,
however, since the IRInterpreter will soon be
working with materialized variables.
- As mentioned above, removed the Memory class
from the IR interpreter altogether. It had a
few functions that remain useful, such as
keeping track of Values that have been placed
in memory, so I moved those into methods on
InterpreterStackFrame.
- Changed IRInterpreter to work with lldb::addr_t
rather than Memory::Region as its primary
currency.
- Fixed a bug in the IRMemoryMap where it did not
report correct address byte size and byte order
if no process was present, because it was using
Target::GetDefaultArchitecture() rather than
Target::GetArchitecture().
- Made IRMemoryMap methods clear the Errors they
receive before running. Having to do this by
hand is just annoying.
The testsuite seems happy with these changes, but
please let me know if you see problems (especially
in use cases without a process).
llvm-svn: 179675
Materializer for all expressions that need to
run in the target. This includes the following
changes:
- Removed a bunch of (de-)materialization code
from ClangExpressionDeclMap and assumed the
presence of a Materializer where we previously
had a fallback.
- Ensured that an IRMemoryMap is passed into
ClangExpressionDeclMap::Materialize().
- Fixed object ownership on LLVMContext; it is
now owned by the IRExecutionUnit, since the
Module and the ExecutionEngine both depend on
its existence.
- Fixed a few bugs in IRMemoryMap and the
Materializer that showed up during testing.
llvm-svn: 179649
- If an allocation is mirrored between the host
and the process, update the host's version
before returning a DataExtractor pointing to
it.
- If anyone attempts to access memory in a
process/target that does not have a corresponding
allocation, try accessing the memory directly
before erroring out.
llvm-svn: 179561
for variables in the new Materializer. This is
much easier now that the ValueObject API is solid.
I still have to implement reading bytes into a
ValueObject, but committing what I have so far.
This code is not yet used, so there will be fixes
when I switch the expression parser over to use the
new Materializer.
llvm-svn: 179416
to the Materializer. Materialization is still done by
the ClangExpressionDeclMap; this will be the next thing
to move.
Also fixed a layout bug that this uncovered.
llvm-svn: 179318
information about each variable that needs to
be materialized for an expression to work. The
next step is to migrate all materialization code
from ClangExpressionDeclMap to Materializer, and
to use it for variable materialization.
llvm-svn: 179245
from IRExecutionUnit into a superclass called
IRMemoryMap. IRMemoryMap handles all reading and
writing, ensuring that areas are kept track of and
memory is properly cached (and deleted).
Also fixed several cases where we would simply leak
binary data in the target process over time. Now
the expression objects explicitly own their
IRExecutionUnit and delete it when they go away. This
is why I had to modify ClangUserExpression,
ClangUtilityFunction, and ClangFunction.
As a side effect of this, I am removing the JIT
mutex for an IRMemoryMap. If it turns out that we
need this mutex, I'll add it in then, but right now
it's just adding complexity.
This is part of a more general project to make
expressions fully reusable. The next step is to
make materialization and dematerialization use
the IRMemoryMap API rather than writing and
reading directly from the process's memory.
This will allow the IR interpreter to use the
same data, but in the host's memory, without having
to use a different set of pointers.
llvm-svn: 178832
Symbol table function names should support lookups like symbols with debug info.
To fix this I:
- Gutted the way FindFunctions is used, there used to be way too much smarts only in the DWARF plug-in
- Made it more efficient by chopping the name up once and using simpler queries so that SymbolFile and Symtab plug-ins don't need to do as much
- Filter the results at a higher level
- Make the lldb_private::Symtab able to chop up C++ mangled names and make as much sense out of them as possible and also be able to search by basename, fullname, method name, and selector name.
llvm-svn: 178608
Note: although it is now possible to declare blocks
and call them inside the same expression, we do not
generate correct block descriptors so these blocks
cannot be passed to functions like dispatch_async.
<rdar://problem/12578656>
llvm-svn: 178509
PC relative loads are missing disassembly comments when disassembled in a live process.
This issue was because some sections, like __TEXT and __DATA in libobjc.A.dylib, were being moved when they were put into the dyld shared cache. This could also affect any other system that slides sections individually.
The solution is to keep track of wether the bytes we will disassemble are from an executable file (file address), or from a live process (load address). We now do the right thing based off of this input in all cases.
llvm-svn: 178315
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
Clang requires them to have complete types, but
we were previously only completing them if they
were of tag or Objective-C object types.
I have implemented a method on the ASTImporter
whose job is to complete a type. It handles not
only the cases mentioned above, but also array
and atomic types.
<rdar://problem/13446777>
llvm-svn: 177672
of the data it writes down into the process even
if the process doesn't exist. This will allow
the IR interpreter to access static data allocated
on the expression's behalf.
Also cleaned up object ownership in the
IRExecutionUnit so that allocations are created
into the allocations vector. This avoids needless
data copies.
<rdar://problem/13424594>
llvm-svn: 177456
and the JITted code are managed by a standalone
class that handles memory management itself.
I have removed RecordingMemoryManager and
ProcessDataAllocator, which filled similar roles
and had confusing ownership, with a common class
called IRExecutionUnit. The IRExecutionUnit
manages all allocations ever made for an expression
and frees them when it goes away. It also contains
the code generator and can vend the Module for an
expression to other clases.
The end goal here is to make the output of the
expression parser re-usable; that is, to avoid
re-parsing when re-parsing isn't necessary.
I've also cleaned up some code and used weak pointers
in more places. Please let me know if you see any
leaks; I checked myself as well but I might have
missed a case.
llvm-svn: 177364
uninitialized memory, to getTrivialTypeSourceInfo,
which initializes its memory, when creating trivial
TypeSourceInfos.
<rdar://problem/13332253>
llvm-svn: 176899
counters for a variety of metrics associated
with expression parsing. This should give some
idea of how much work the expression parser is
doing on Clang's behalf, and help with hopefully
reducing that load over time.
<rdar://problem/13210748> Audit type search/import for expressions
llvm-svn: 176714
DWARF with .o files now uses 40-60% less memory!
Big fixes include:
- Change line table internal representation to contain "file addresses". Since each line table is owned by a compile unit that is owned by a module, it makes address translation into lldb_private::Address easy to do when needed.
- Removed linked address members/methods from lldb_private::Section and lldb_private::Address
- lldb_private::LineTable can now relink itself using a FileRangeMap to make it easier to re-link line tables in the future
- Added ObjectFile::ClearSymtab() so that we can get rid of the object file symbol tables after we parse them once since they are not needed and kept memory allocated for no reason
- Moved the m_sections_ap (std::auto_ptr to section list) and m_symtab_ap (std::auto_ptr to the lldb_private::Symtab) out of each of the ObjectFile subclasses and put it into lldb_private::ObjectFile.
- Changed how the debug map is parsed and stored to be able to:
- Lazily parse the debug map for each object file
- not require the address map for a .o file until debug information is linked for a .o file
llvm-svn: 176454
Calculate "can branch" using the MC API's rather than our hand-rolled regex'es.
As extra credit, allow setting the disassembly flavor for x86 based architectures to intel or att.
<rdar://problem/11319574>
<rdar://problem/9329275>
llvm-svn: 176392
- made sure we tell Clang not to try to
complete the type since it can't be
completed from its origin any more; and
- fixed a silly bug where we tried to
forget about the original decl's origins
rather than the deported decl's origin.
These produced some crashes in ptr_refs,
especially under libgmalloc.
<rdar://problem/13256150>
llvm-svn: 176233
StackFrame assumes m_sc is additive, but m_sc can lose its target. So now the SymbolContext::Clear() method takes a bool that indicates if the target should be cleared. Modified all existing code to properly set the bool argument.
llvm-svn: 175953
On x86-64 platforms, the small code model assumes that code will be loaded below the 2GB boundary. With the static relocation model, the fact that the expression code is initially loaded (in the LLDB debugger address space) above that boundary causes problems. Switching to the JITDefault code model causes the large code model to be used for 64-bit targets and small code model of 32-bit targets.
llvm-svn: 175828
- generate-vers.pl has to be called by cmake to generate the version number
- parallel builds not yet supported; dependency on clang must be explicitly specified
Tested on Linux.
- Building on Mac will require code-signing logic to be implemented.
- Building on Windows will require OS-detection logic and some selective directory inclusion
Thanks to Carlo Kok (who originally prepared these CMakefiles for Windows) and Ben Langmuir
who ported them to Linux!
llvm-svn: 175795
- removed an unnecessary variable
- fixed an issue where we sometimes
wrote too much data into a buffer
- made the recognition of variables
as "this" a little more conservative
<rdar://problem/13216268>
llvm-svn: 175318
Parse objective C information as efficiently as possible and without taking dangerous runtime locks.
Reworked the way objective C information is parsed by:
1 - don't read all class names up front, this is about 500K of data with names
2 - add a 32 bit hash map that maps a hash of a name to the Class pointer (isa)
3 - Improved name lookups by using the new hash map
4 - split up reading the objc runtime info into dynamic and shared cache since the shared cache only needs to be read once.
5 - When reading all isa values, also get the 32 bit hash instead of the name
6 - Read names lazily now that we don't need all names up front
7 - Allow the hash maps to not be there and still have this function correctly
There is dead code in here with all of the various methods I tried. I want to check this in first to not lose any of it in case we need to revert to any of the extra code. I will promptly cleanup and commit again.
llvm-svn: 175101
changing the ClangASTSource to return a bool instead
of returning a list of results. Our testsuite mostly
works with this change, but some minor issues may
remain both on LLDB's side and on Clang's side.
llvm-svn: 174949
up variables in the current stack frame to avoid
mutual recursion between the expression parser
and the synthetic child providers. Variables
should only be looked up in a very simple way,
using no synthetic anything.
<rdar://problem/13173454>
llvm-svn: 174947
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
support reporting "this" as a templated class. The
expression parser wraps expressions in C++ methods
as methods with the signature
$__lldb_class::$__lldb_expr(...)
and previously responded to clang's queries about
$__lldb_class with the type of *this. This didn't
work if *this was a ClassTemplateSpecializationDecl
because ClassTemplateSpecializationDecls can't be
the result of simple name queries.
Instead what we do now is respond that $__lldb_class
is a typedef and that the target of the typedef is
the (potentially templated) type of *this. That is
much more robust.
Thanks to John McCall for key insights.
<rdar://problem/10987183>
llvm-svn: 174153
Make the message when you hit an crash while evaluating an expression a little clearer, and mention "thread return -x".
rdar://problem/13110464
llvm-svn: 174095
Major fixed to allow reading files that are over 4GB. The main problems were that the DataExtractor was using 32 bit offsets as a data cursor, and since we mmap all of our object files we could run into cases where if we had a very large core file that was over 4GB, we were running into the 4GB boundary.
So I defined a new "lldb::offset_t" which should be used for all file offsets.
After making this change, I enabled warnings for data loss and for enexpected implicit conversions temporarily and found a ton of things that I fixed.
Any functions that take an index internally, should use "size_t" for any indexes and also should return "size_t" for any sizes of collections.
llvm-svn: 173463
in an Objective-C class method. Before, errors
of the form
error: cannot find interface declaration for '$__lldb_objc_class'
would appear when running any expression when
the current frame is a block that captures 'self'
from an Objective-C class method.
<rdar://problem/12905561>
llvm-svn: 172880
DW_AT_const_value instead of a location. Also
added a testcase covering "frame variable," "expr"
using the IR interpreter, and "expr" using the
LLVM JIT.
<rdar://problem/12978195>
llvm-svn: 172848
handling multiple clients. However, occasionally an
expression must be run in the service of another
expression, and in this case two parsers need to access
the same list of persistent variables.
To allow this, persistent variables now provide state
for multiple parsers, and parsers must allocate, access,
and deallocate this state by providing their own ID
(at the moment, simply the value of the "this" pointer).
<rdar://problem/12914539>
llvm-svn: 172573
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
migration in r171366.
I don't know anything about lldb, but a force run of the build bot indicated it
would need this patch. I'll try to watch the build bot to get it green.
llvm-svn: 171374
The results from Clang name lookups changed to
be ArrayRefs, so I had to change the way we
check for the presence of a result and the way
we iterate across results.
llvm-svn: 170927
for reporting class types from Objective-C runtime
class symbols. Instead, LLDB now queries the
Objective-C runtime for class types.
We have also added a (minimal) Objective-C runtime
type vendor for Objective-C runtime version 1, to
prevent regressions when calling class methods in
the V1 runtime.
Other components of this fix include:
- We search the Objective-C runtime in a few more
places.
- We enable enumeration of all members of
Objective-C classes, which Clang does in certain
circumstances.
- SBTarget::FindFirstType and SBTarget::FindTypes
now query the Objective-C runtime as needed.
- I fixed several test cases.
<rdar://problem/12885034>
llvm-svn: 170601
"self" when those pointers are in registers.
Previously in this case the IRInterpreter would
handle them just as if the user had typed in
"$rdi", which isn't safe because $rdi is passed
in through the argument struct.
Now we correctly break out all three cases (i.e.,
normal variables in registers, $reg, and this/self),
and handle them in a way that's a little bit easier
to read and change.
This results in more accurate printing of "this" and
"self" pointers all around. I have strengthened the
optimized-code test case for Objective-C to ensure
that we catch regressions in this area reliably in
the future.
<rdar://problem/12693963>
llvm-svn: 169924
- remove unused members
- add NO_PEDANTIC to selected Makefiles
- fix return values (removed NULL as needed)
- disable warning about four-char-constants
- remove unneeded const from operator*() declaration
- add missing lambda function return types
- fix printf() with no format string
- change sizeof to use a type name instead of variable name
- fix Linux ProcessMonitor.cpp to be 32/64 bit friendly
- disable warnings emitted by swig-generated C++ code
Patch by Matt Kopec!
llvm-svn: 169645
of the "self"/"this" pointer for the current stack
frame before wrapping expressions in C++ or
Objective-C methods. This works around bad debug
info where the compiler emits a "this" or "self"
but doesn't give any way to find its location.
<rdar://problem/12809985>
llvm-svn: 169461
- 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
Allow the expression parser to see more than just data symbols. We now accept any symbol that has an address. We take precautions to only accept symbols by their mangled or demangled names only if the demangled name was not synthesized. If the demangled name is synthesized, then we now mark symbols accordingly and only compare against the mangled original name.
llvm-svn: 168668
expressions that refer to ivars will not work because Clang
emits IR that refers to them to get the ivar offsets.
However, it is possible to search the runtime for these values.
I have added support for reading the relevant tables to the
Objective-C runtime, and extended ClangExpressionDeclMap to
query that information if and only if it doesn't find the symbols
in the binary.
Also added a testcase.
<rdar://problem/12628122>
llvm-svn: 168018
This commit does three things:
(a) introduces a new notification model for adding/removing/changing modules to a ModuleList, and applies it to the Target's ModuleList, so that we make sure to always trigger the right set of actions
whenever modules come and go in a target. Certain spots in the code still need to "manually" notify the Target for several reasons, so this is a work in progress
(b) adds a new capability to the Platforms: locating a scripting resources associated to a module. A scripting resource is a Python file that can load commands, formatters, ... and any other action
of interest corresponding to the loading of a module. At the moment, this is only implemented on Mac OS X and only for files inside .dSYM bundles - the next step is going to be letting
the frameworks themselves hold their scripting resources. Implementors of platforms for other systems are free to implement "the right thing" for their own worlds
(c) hooking up items (a) and (b) so that targets auto-load the scripting resources as the corresponding modules get loaded in a target. This has a few caveats at the moment:
- the user needs to manually add the .py file to the dSYM (soon, it will also work in the framework itself)
- if two modules with the same name show up during the lifetime of an LLDB session, the second one won't be able to load its scripting resource, but will otherwise work just fine
llvm-svn: 167569
the runtime if we have complete debug information
for a class.
Also made the Objective-C language runtime return
NULL when asked for the complete debug information
(i.e., information from DWARF, not information from
the runtime) if that information isn't present. It
used to return a non-authoritative version, which
made it hard for clients to determine whether
complete debug information was available.
<rdar://problem/12608895>
llvm-svn: 167299
The attached patch adds eValueTypeVector to lldb_private::Value. The nested struct Vector is patterned after RegisterValue::m_data.buffer. This change to Value allows ClangExpressionDeclMap::LookupDecl to return vector register data for consumption by InterpreterStackFrame::ResolveValue. Note that ResolveValue was tweaked slightly to allocate enough memory for vector registers.
An immediate result of this patch is that "expr $xmm0" generates the same results on Linux as on the Mac, which is good enough for TestRegisters.py. In addition, the log of m_memory.PrintData(data_region.m_base, data_region.m_extent) shows that the register content has been resolved successfully. On the other hand, the output is glaringly empty:
runCmd: expr $xmm0
output: (unsigned char __attribute__((ext_vector_type(16)))) $0 = {}
Expecting sub string: vector_type
Matched
llvm-svn: 167033
so it could hold this information, and then used it to look up unfound names in the object pointer
if it exists. This gets "frame var" to work for unqualified references to ivars captured in blocks.
But the expression parser is ignoring this information still.
llvm-svn: 166860
enabled after we'd found a few bugs that were caused by shadowed
local variables; the most important issue this turned up was
a common mistake of trying to obtain a mutex lock for the scope
of a code block by doing
Mutex::Locker(m_map_mutex);
This doesn't assign the lock object to a local variable; it is
a temporary that has its dtor called immediately. Instead,
Mutex::Locker locker(m_map_mutex);
does what is intended. For some reason -Wshadow happened to
highlight these as shadowed variables.
I also fixed a few obivous and easy shadowed variable issues
across the code base but there are a couple dozen more that
should be fixed when someone has a free minute.
<rdar://problem/12437585>
llvm-svn: 165269
top-of-tree. Removed all local patches and llvm.zip.
The intent is that fron now on top-of-tree will
always build against LLVM/Clang top-of-tree, and
that problems building will be resolved as they
occur. Stable release branches of LLDB can be
constructed as needed and linked to specific release
branches of LLVM/Clang.
llvm-svn: 164563
not correctly store the contents of Objective-C
classes. This was due to a combination of
factors:
1) Types were only being completed if we were
looking inside them for specific ivars
(using FindExternalVisibleDeclsByName).
We now look the complete type up at every
FindExternalLexicalDecls.
2) Even if the types were completed properly,
ValueObjectConstResult overrode the type
of every ValueObject using the complete type
for its class from the debug information.
Superclasses of complete classes are not
guaranteed to be complete. Although "frame
variable" uses the debug information,
the expression parser does now piece together
complete types at every level (as described
in Bullet 1), so I provided a way for the
expression parser to prevent overriding.
3) Type sizes were being miscomputed by
ClangASTContext. It ignored the ISA pointer
and only counted fields. We now correctly
count the ISA in the size of an object.
<rdar://problem/12315386>
llvm-svn: 164333
information from the Objective-C runtime.
This patch takes the old AppleObjCSymbolVendor and
replaces it with an AppleObjCTypeVendor, which is
much more lightweight. Specifically, the SymbolVendor
needs to pretend that there is a backing symbol file
for the Types it vends, whereas a TypeVendor only
vends bare ClangASTTypes. These ClangASTTypes only
need to exist in an ASTContext.
The ClangASTSource now falls back to the runtime's
TypeVendor (if one exists) if the debug information
doesn't find a complete type for a particular
Objective-C interface. The runtime's TypeVendor
maintains an ASTContext full of types it knows about,
and re-uses the ISA-based type query information used
by the ValueObjects.
Currently, the runtime's TypeVendor doesn't provide
useful answers because we haven't yet implemented a
way to iterate across all ISAs contained in the target
process's runtime. That's the next step.
llvm-svn: 163651
Make breakpoint setting by file and line much more efficient by only looking for inlined breakpoint locations if we are setting a breakpoint in anything but a source implementation file. Implementing this complex for a many reasons. Turns out that parsing compile units lazily had some issues with respect to how we need to do things with DWARF in .o files. So the fixes in the checkin for this makes these changes:
- Add a new setting called "target.inline-breakpoint-strategy" which can be set to "never", "always", or "headers". "never" will never try and set any inlined breakpoints (fastest). "always" always looks for inlined breakpoint locations (slowest, but most accurate). "headers", which is the default setting, will only look for inlined breakpoint locations if the breakpoint is set in what are consudered to be header files, which is realy defined as "not in an implementation source file".
- modify the breakpoint setting by file and line to check the current "target.inline-breakpoint-strategy" setting and act accordingly
- Modify compile units to be able to get their language and other info lazily. This allows us to create compile units from the debug map and not have to fill all of the details in, and then lazily discover this information as we go on debuggging. This is needed to avoid parsing all .o files when setting breakpoints in implementation only files (no inlines). Otherwise we would need to parse the .o file, the object file (mach-o in our case) and the symbol file (DWARF in the object file) just to see what the compile unit was.
- modify the "SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap" to subclass lldb_private::Module so that the virtual "GetObjectFile()" and "GetSymbolVendor()" functions can be intercepted when the .o file contenst are later lazilly needed. Prior to this fix, when we first instantiated the "SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap" class, we would also make modules, object files and symbol files for every .o file in the debug map because we needed to fix up the sections in the .o files with information that is in the executable debug map. Now we lazily do this in the DebugMapModule::GetObjectFile()
Cleaned up header includes a bit as well.
llvm-svn: 162860
Fixed an issue that could cause references the shared data for an object file to stay around longer than intended and could cause memory bloat when debugging multiple times.
llvm-svn: 161716
keep a shared pointer to their disassembler. This
is important for the LLVM-C disassembler because
it needs to lock its parent in order to disassemble
itself.
This means that every interface that returned a
Disassembler* needs to return a DisassemblerSP, so
that the instructions and any external owners share
the same reference count on the object. I changed
all clients to use this shared pointer, which also
plugged a few leaks.
<rdar://problem/12002822>
llvm-svn: 161123
Objective-C method names when looking for functions
in the top level or a namespace. Method names should
only be found via FindExternalLexicalDecls.
<rdar://problem/11711679>
llvm-svn: 160907
sel_getName() calls are generated for all Objective-C
selectors before static literals are moved to the
static allocation. This prevents errors of the form
Internal error [IRForTarget]: Couldn't change a static
reference to an Objective-C selector to a dynamic
reference
<rdar://problem/11331906>
llvm-svn: 160887
to returned by expressions, by removing the
__cxa_atexit call that would normally cause these
objects to be destroyed. This also prevents many
errors of the form
Couldn't rewrite one of the arguments of a function call
error: Couldn't materialize struct: Structure hasn't been laid out yet
<rdar://problem/11309402>
llvm-svn: 160596
Improved the error message when we can find a function in the current program by printing the demangled name.
Also added the ability to create lldb_private::Mangled instances with a ConstString when we already have a ConstString for a mangled or demangled name. Also added the ability to call SetValue with a ConstString and also without a boolean to indicate if the string is mangled where we will now auto-detect if the string is mangled.
llvm-svn: 160450
current symbol context is a C++ or Objective-C
instance method.
Specifically, ensure that we fetch information
on the current block, not just the current
function.
llvm-svn: 160195
- On iOS, we select the "apcs-gnu" ABI to match
what libraries expect.
- Literals are now allocated at their preferred
alignment, eliminating many alignment crashes.
llvm-svn: 158236
setting breakpoints. That's dangerous, since while we are setting a breakpoint,
the target might hit the dyld load notification, and start removing modules from
the list. This change adds a GetMutex accessor to the ModuleList class, and
uses it whenever we are accessing the target's ModuleList (as returned by GetImages().)
<rdar://problem/11552372>
llvm-svn: 157668
various other syntactic sugar work. Lambdas do
not due to some problems relocating code containing
lambdas. Rvalue references work when returned from
expressions, but need more testing.
llvm-svn: 156948
Fixed the DisassemblerLLVMC disassembler to parse more efficiently instead of parsing opcodes over and over. The InstructionLLVMC class now only reads the opcode in the InstructionLLVMC::Decode function. This can be done very efficiently for ARM and architectures that have fixed opcode sizes. For x64 it still calls the disassembler to get the byte size.
Moved the lldb_private::Instruction::Dump(...) function up into the lldb_private::Instruction class and it now uses the function that gets the mnemonic, operandes and comments so that all disassembly is using the same code.
Added StreamString::FillLastLineToColumn() to allow filling a line up to a column with a character (which is used by the lldb_private::Instruction::Dump(...) function).
Modified the Opcode::GetData() fucntion to "do the right thing" for thumb instructions.
llvm-svn: 156532
ones, to its own constant pool. This reflects the fact
that the LLVM code generators for different targets move
floats to their constant pools under varying conditions,
and the JIT cannot (yet) be relied upon to relocate references to
its constant pool correctly.
llvm-svn: 155660
doesn't return a result. If that expression can't
be run in the current context (for example, if it
uses a function and there is no running process)
then we used to try to destroy the nonexistent
result variable. We now only destroy the result
variable if we actually made one.
llvm-svn: 155455
correctly if the setter/getter were not present
in the debug information. The fixes are as follows:
- We not only look for the method by its full name,
but also look for automatically-generated methods
when searching for a selector in an Objective-C
interface. This is necessary to find accessors.
- Extract the getter and setter name from the
DW_TAG_APPLE_Property declaration in the DWARF
if they are present; generate them if not.
llvm-svn: 154067
Fixed an issue that could cause circular type parsing that will assert and kill LLDB.
Prior to this fix the DWARF parser would always create class types and not start their definitions (for both C++ and ObjC classes) until we were asked to complete the class later. When we had cases like:
class A
{
class B
{
};
};
We would alway try to complete A before specifying "A" as the decl context for B. Turns out we can just start the definition and still not complete the class since we can check the TagDecl::isCompleteDefinition() function. This only works for C++ types. This means we will not be pulling in the full definition of parent classes all the time and should help with our memory consumption and also reduce the amount of debug info we have to parse.
I also reduced redundant code that was checking in a lldb::clang_type_t was a possible C++ dynamic type since it was still completing the type, just to see if it was dynamic. This was fixed in another function that was checking for a type being dynamic as an ObjC or a C++ type, but there was dedicated fucntion for C++ that we missed.
llvm-svn: 153713
Fixed type lookups to "do the right thing". Prior to this fix, looking up a type using "foo::bar" would result in a type list that contains all types that had "bar" as a basename unless the symbol file was able to match fully qualified names (which our DWARF parser does not).
This fix will allow type matches to be made based on the basename and then have the types that don't match filtered out. Types by name can be fully qualified, or partially qualified with the new "bool exact_match" parameter to the Module::FindTypes() method.
This fixes some issue that we discovered with dynamic type resolution as well as improves the overall type lookups in LLDB.
llvm-svn: 153482
Now when LLDB reports a variable, it has a
complete type. Similarly, when it reports
members of a struct, it completes their types.
Also, when it creates the result variable for
an expression, it ensures that variable's type
is complete.
This ensures compliance with Clang's
expectations, preventing potential crashes.
llvm-svn: 152771
This takes two important changes:
- Calling blocks is now supported. You need to
cast their return values, but that works fine.
- We now can correctly run JIT-compiled
expressions that use floating-point numbers.
Also, we have taken a fix that allows us to
ignore access control in Objective-C as in C++.
llvm-svn: 152286
This fix really needed to happen as a previous fix I had submitted for
calculating symbol sizes made many symbols appear to have zero size since
the function that was calculating the symbol size was calling another function
that would cause the calculation to happen again. This resulted in some symbols
having zero size when they shouldn't. This could then cause infinite stack
traces and many other side affects.
llvm-svn: 152244
allocations by section. We install these sections
in the target process and inform the JIT of their
new locations.
Also removed some unused variable warnings.
llvm-svn: 151789
I started work on being able to add symbol files after a debug session
had started with a new "target symfile add" command and quickly ran into
problems with stale Address objects in breakpoint locations that had
lldb_private::Section pointers into modules that had been removed or
replaced. This also let to grabbing stale modules from those sections.
So I needed to thread harded the Address, Section and related objects.
To do this I modified the ModuleChild class to now require a ModuleSP
on initialization so that a weak reference can created. I also changed
all places that were handing out "Section *" to have them hand out SectionSP.
All ObjectFile, SymbolFile and SymbolVendors were inheriting from ModuleChild
so all of the find plug-in, static creation function and constructors now
require ModuleSP references instead of Module *.
Address objects now have weak references to their sections which can
safely go stale when a module gets destructed.
This checkin doesn't complete the "target symfile add" command, but it
does get us a lot clioser to being able to do such things without a high
risk of crashing or memory corruption.
llvm-svn: 151336
Objective-C classes. This allows LLDB to find
ivars declared in class extensions in modules other
than where the debugger is currently stopped (we
already supported this when the debugger was
stopped in the same module as the definition).
This involved the following main changes:
- The ObjCLanguageRuntime now knows how to hunt
for the authoritative version of an Objective-C
type. It looks for the symbol indicating a
definition, and then gets the type from the
module containing that symbol.
- ValueObjects now report their type with a
potential override, and the override is set if
the type of the ValueObject is an Objective-C
class or pointer type that is defined somewhere
other than the original reported type. This
means that "frame variable" will always use the
complete type if one is available.
- The ClangASTSource now looks for the complete
type when looking for ivars. This means that
"expr" will always use the complete type if one
is available.
- I added a testcase that verifies that both
"frame variable" and "expr" work.
llvm-svn: 151214
the lldb_private::StackFrame objects hold onto a weak pointer to the thread
object. The lldb_private::StackFrame objects the the most volatile objects
we have as when we are doing single stepping, frames can often get lost or
thrown away, only to be re-created as another object that still refers to the
same frame. We have another bug tracking that. But we need to be able to
have frames no longer be able to get the thread when they are not part of
a thread anymore, and this is the first step (this fix makes that possible
but doesn't implement it yet).
Also changed lldb_private::ExecutionContextScope to return shared pointers to
all objects in the execution context to further thread harden the internals.
llvm-svn: 150871
JIT when printing the values of registers (e.g.,
"expr $pc"). Now the expression parser can do this
in the IR interpreter without running code in the
inferior process.
llvm-svn: 150554
indicate whether inline functions are desired.
This allows the expression parser, for instance,
to filter out inlined functions when looking for
functions it can call.
llvm-svn: 150279
parser. Specifically:
- ClangUserExpression now keeps weak pointers to the
structures it needs and then locks them when needed.
This ensures that they continue to be valid without
leaking memory if the ClangUserExpression is long
lived.
- ClangExpressionDeclMap, instead of keeping a pointer
to an ExecutionContext, now contains an
ExecutionContext. This prevents bugs if the pointer
or its contents somehow become stale. It also no
longer requires that ExecutionContexts be passed
into any function except its initialization function,
since it can count on the ExecutionContext still
being around.
There's a lot of room for improvement (specifically,
ClangExpressionDeclMap should also use weak pointers
insetad of shared pointers) but this is an important
first step that codifies assumptions that already
existed in the code.
llvm-svn: 150217
information about the current frame rather than
the debug information about "this" and "self"
when determining the types of those pointers.
This allows expressions to work in frames that
don't have valid "this" and "self" pointers,
working around poor debug information.
llvm-svn: 150051
sufficiently general - it could only handle
literals and operations that didn't change the
data. Now the constant evaluator passes APInt
values around, and can handle GetElementPtr
constants.
llvm-svn: 150034
LLVM/Clang. This brings in several fixes, including:
- Improvements in the Just-In-Time compiler's
allocation of memory: the JIT now allocates
memory in chunks of sections, improving its
ability to generate relocations. I have
revamped the RecordingMemoryManager to reflect
these changes, as well as to get the memory
allocation and data copying out fo the
ClangExpressionParser code. Jim Grosbach wrote
the updates to the JIT on the LLVM side.
- A new ExternalASTSource interface to allow LLDB to
report accurate structure layout information to
Clang. Previously we could only report the sizes
of fields, not their offsets. This meant that if
data structures included field alignment
directives, we could not communicate the necessary
alignment to Clang and accesses to the data would
fail. Now we can (and I have update the relevant
test case). Thanks to Doug Gregor for implementing
the Clang side of this fix.
- The way Objective-C interfaces are completed by
Clang has been made consistent with RecordDecls;
with help from Doug Gregor and Greg Clayton I have
ensured that this still works.
- I have eliminated all local LLVM and Clang patches,
committing the ones that are still relevant to LLVM
and Clang as needed.
I have tested the changes extensively locally, but
please let me know if they cause any trouble for you.
llvm-svn: 149775
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
an error along with its boolean result. The
expression parser reports this error if the
interpreter fails and the expression could not be
run in the target.
llvm-svn: 148870
for each ObjCInterfaceDecl was imposing performance
penalties for Objective-C apps. Instead, we now use
the normal function query mechanisms, which use the
relevant accelerator tables.
This fix also includes some modifications to the
SymbolFile which allow us to find Objective-C methods
and report their Clang Decls correctly.
llvm-svn: 148457
parser was creating malformed resuls. When the
location of a variable is computed by reading a
register and adding an offset, we shouldn't say
that the variable's value is located in that
register. This was confusing the expression
parser when trying to read a variable captured
by a block.
llvm-svn: 147668
Be better at detecting when DWARF changes and handle this more
gracefully than asserting and exiting.
Also fixed up a bunch of system calls that weren't properly checking
for EINTR.
llvm-svn: 147559
Switch from GetReturnValue, which was hardly ever used, to GetReturnValueObject
which is much more convenient.
Return the "return value object" as a persistent variable if requested.
llvm-svn: 147157
parser has hitherto been an implementation waiting
for a use. I have now tied the '-o' option for
the expression command -- which indicates that the
result is an Objective-C object and needs to be
printed -- to the ExpressionParser, which
communicates the desired type to Clang.
Now, if the result of an expression is determined
by an Objective-C method call for which there is
no type information, that result is implicitly
cast to id if and only if the -o option is passed
to the expression command. (Otherwise if there
is no explicit cast Clang will issue an error.
This behavior is identical to what happened before
r146756.)
Also added a testcase for -o enabled and disabled.
llvm-svn: 147099
"id" from being found by the parser as an
externally-defined type. Before, "id" would
sometimes make it through if it was defined in
a namespace, but this sometimes caused
confusion, for example when it conflicted with
std::locale::id.
llvm-svn: 146891
valobj.AddressOf() returns None when an address is expected in a SyntheticChildrenProvider
Patch from Enrico Granata:
The problem was that the frozen object created by the expression parser was a copy of the contents of the StgClosure, rather than a pointer to it. Thus, the expression parser was correctly computing the result of the arithmetic&cast operation along with its address, but only saving it in the live object. This meant that the frozen copy acted as an address-less variable, hence the problem.
The fix attached to this email lets the expression parser store the "live address" in the frozen copy of the address when the object is built without a valid address of its own.
Doing so, along with delegating ValueObjectConstResult to calculate its own address when necessary, solves the issue. I have also added a new test case to check for regressions in this area, and checked that existing test cases pass correctly.
llvm-svn: 146768
we handle Objective-C method calls. Currently,
LLDB treats the result of an Objective-C method
as unknown if the type information doesn't have
the method's signature. Now Clang can cast the
result to id if it isn't explicitly cast.
I also added a test case for this, as well as a
fix for a type import problem that this feature
exposed.
llvm-svn: 146756
the expression parser to locate instances where
dyn_cast<>() and isa<>() are used on types, and
replace them with getAs<>() as appropriate.
The difference is that dyn_cast<>() and isa<>()
are essentially LLVM/Clang's equivalent of RTTI
-- that is, they try to downcast the object and
return NULL if they cannot -- but getAs<>() can
traverse typedefs to perform a semantic cast.
llvm-svn: 146537
validates the "self," "this," and "_cmd" pointers
that get passed into expressions. It used to check
them aggressively for validity before allowing the
expression to run as an object method; now, this
functionality is gated by a bool and off by default.
Now the default is that when LLDB is stopped in a
method of a class, code entered using "expr" will
always masquerade as an instance method. If for
some reason "self," "this," or "_cmd" is unavailable
it will be reported as NULL. This may cause the
expression to crash if it relies on those pointers,
but for example getting the addresses of ivars will
now work as the user would expect.
llvm-svn: 146465
- Even if a frame isn't present, we always try
to use FindGlobalVariable to find variables.
Instead of using frame->TrackGlobalVariable()
to promote the VariableSP into a ValueObject,
we now simply use ValueObjectVariable.
- When requesting the value of a variable, we
allow returning of the "live version" of the
variable -- that is, the variable in the
target instead of a pointer to its freeze
dried version in LLDB -- even if there is no
process present.
llvm-svn: 146315
in the context in which it was originally found, the
expression parser now goes hunting for it in all modules
(in the appropriate namespace, if applicable). This means
that forward-declared types that exist in another shared
library will now be resolved correctly.
Added a test case to cover this. The test case also tests
"frame variable," which does not have this functionality
yet.
llvm-svn: 146204
pointer to make the result of an expression. LLDB now
dumps the ivars of the Objective-C object and all of
its parents. This just required fixing a bug where we
didn't distinguish between Objective-C object pointers
and regular C-style pointers.
Also added a testcase to verify that this continues to
work.
llvm-svn: 146164
symbols. Now we find the correct method.
Unfortunately we don't get the superclass from the
runtime yet so the method doesn't import correctly
(and I added a check to make sure that doesn't hurt
us) but once we get that information right we will
report methods correctly to the parser as well.
Getting superclass information requires a common AST
context for all Objective-C runtime information,
meaning that the superclass and the subclass are in
the same AST context in all cases. That is the next
thing that needs to be done here.
llvm-svn: 146089
from symbols more accessible, I have added a second
map to the ClangASTImporter: the ObjCInterfaceMetaMap.
This map keeps track of all type definitions found for
a particular Objective-C interface, allowing the
ClangASTSource to refer to all possible sources when
looking for method definitions.
There is a bug in lookup that I still need to figure out,
but after that we should be able to report full method
information for Objective-C classes shown in symbols.
Also fixed some errors I ran into when enabling the maps
for the persistent type store. The persistent type store
previously did not use the ClangASTImporter to import
types, instead using ASTImporters that got allocated each
time a type needed copying. To support the requirements
of the persistent type store -- namely, that types must be
copied, completed, and then completely severed from their
origin in the parser's AST context (which will go away) --
I added a new function called DeportType which severs all
these connections.
llvm-svn: 145914
add them to a fast lookup map. lldb_private::Symtab now export the following
public typedefs:
namespace lldb_private {
class Symtab {
typedef std::vector<uint32_t> IndexCollection;
typedef UniqueCStringMap<uint32_t> NameToIndexMap;
};
}
Clients can then find symbols by name and or type and end up with a
Symtab::IndexCollection that is filled with indexes. These indexes can then
be put into a name to index lookup map and control if the mangled and
demangled names get added to the map:
bool add_demangled = true;
bool add_mangled = true;
Symtab::NameToIndexMap name_to_index;
symtab->AppendSymbolNamesToMap (indexes, add_demangled, add_mangled, name_to_index).
This can be repeated as many times as needed to get a lookup table that
you are happy with, and then this can be sorted:
name_to_index.Sort();
Now name lookups can be done using a subset of the symbols you extracted from
the symbol table. This is currently being used to extract objective C types
from object files when there is no debug info in SymbolFileSymtab.
Cleaned up how the objective C types were being vended to be more efficient
and fixed some errors in the regular expression that was being used.
llvm-svn: 145777
object file can correctly make these symbols which will abstract us from the
file format and ABI and we can then ask for the objective C class symbol for
a class and find out which object file it was defined in.
llvm-svn: 145744
in the face of failures to import types, since blithely
passing on NULL types can sometimes lead to trouble.
Also eliminated a use of getAs and replaced it with
dyn_cast, which is more robust.
llvm-svn: 145628
enhancements. With these enhancements, the return values
of Objective-C methods with unknown return types can be
implicitly cast to id for the purpose of making method
calls.
So what would have required this:
(int)[(id)[ClassWithNoDebugInfo methodReturningObject] methodReturningInt]
can now be written as:
(int)[[ClassWithNoDebugInfo methodReturningObject] methodReturningInt]
llvm-svn: 145567
robust:
- Now a client can specify what kind of symbols
are needed; notably, this allows looking up
Objective-C class symbols specifically.
- In the class of symbols being looked up, if
one is non-NULL and others are NULL, LLDB now
prefers the non-NULL one.
llvm-svn: 145554
ClangASTSource::~ClangASTSource() was calling
ClangASTContext *scratch_clang_ast_context = m_target->GetScratchClangASTContext();
which had the side effect of deleting this very ClangASTSource instance. Not good.
Change it to
// We are in the process of destruction, don't create clang ast context on demand
// by passing false to Target::GetScratchClangASTContext(create_on_demand).
ClangASTContext *scratch_clang_ast_context = m_target->GetScratchClangASTContext(false);
The Target::GetScratchClangASTContext(bool create_on_demand=true) has a new signature.
llvm-svn: 145537
to find Objective-C class types by looking in the
symbol tables for the individual object files.
I did this as follows:
- I added code to SymbolFileSymtab that vends
Clang types for symbols matching the pattern
"_OBJC_CLASS_$_NSMyClassName," making them
appear as Objective-C classes. This only occurs
in modules that do not have debug information,
since otherwise SymbolFileDWARF would be in
charge of looking up types.
- I made a new SymbolVendor subclass for the
Apple Objective-C runtime that is in charge of
making global lookups of Objective-C types. It
currently just sends out type lookup requests to
the appropriate SymbolFiles, but in the future we
will probably extend it to query the runtime more
completely.
I also modified a testcase whose behavior is changed
by the fact that we now actually return an Objective-C
type for __NSCFString.
llvm-svn: 145526
management of what allocations remain after an
expression finishes executing. This saves around
2.5KiB per expression for simple expressions.
llvm-svn: 145342
several patches. These patches fix a problem
where templated types were not being completed the
first time they were used, and fix a variety of
minor issues I discovered while fixing that problem.
One of the previous local patches was resolved in
the most recent Clang, so I removed it. The others
will be removed in due course.
llvm-svn: 144984
to allow variables in the persistent variable store to know
how to complete themselves from debug information. That
fixes a variety of bugs during dematerialization of
expression results and also makes persistent variable and
result variables ($foo, $4, ...) more useful.
I have also added logging improvements that make it much
easier to figure out how types are moving from place to
place, and made some checking a little more aggressive.
The commit includes patches to Clang which are currently being
integrated into Clang proper; once these fixes are in Clang
top-of-tree, these patches will be removed. The patches don't
fix API; rather, they fix some internal bugs in Clang's
ASTImporter that were exposed when LLDB was moving types from
place to place multiple times.
llvm-svn: 144969
rather than individually on behalf of each
ASTContext. This allows the ASTImporter to know
about all containers of types, which will let it
be smarter about forwarding information about
type origins. That means that the following
sequence of steps will be possible (after a few
more changes):
- Import a type from a Module's ASTContext into
an expression parser ASTContext, tracking its
origin information -- this works now.
- Because the result of the expression uses that
type, import it from the expression parser
ASTContext into the Target's scratch AST
context, forwarding the origin information --
this needs to be added.
- For a later expression that uses the result,
import the type from the Target's scratch AST
context, still forwarding origin information
-- this also needs to be added.
- Use the intact origin information to complete
the type as needed -- this works now if the
origin information is present.
To this end, I made the following changes:
- ASTImporter top-level copy functions now
require both a source and a destination AST
context parameter.
- The ASTImporter now knows how to purge
records related to an ASTContext that is
going away.
- The Target now owns and creates the ASTImporter
whenever the main executable changes or (in the
absence of a main executable) on demand.
llvm-svn: 144802
types. First, I added handling for the memset intrinsic
in the IR, which is used to zero out the returned struct.
Second, I fixed the object-checking instrumentation
to objc_msgSend_stret, and generally tightened up how
the object-checking functions get inserted.
llvm-svn: 144741
of problems with Objective-C object completion. To go
along with the LLVM/Clang-side fixes, we have a variety
of Objective-C improvements.
Fixes include:
- It is now possible to run expressions when stopped in
an Objective-C class method and have "self" act just
like "self" would act in the class method itself (i.e.,
[self classMethod] works without casting the return
type if debug info is present). To accomplish this,
the expression masquerades as a class method added by
a category.
- Objective-C objects can now provide methods and
properties and methods to Clang on demand (i.e., the
ASTImporter sets hasExternalVisibleDecls on Objective-C
interface objects).
- Objective-C built-in types, which had long been a bone
of contention (should we be using "id"? "id*"?), are
now fetched correctly using accessor functions on
ClangASTContext. We inhibit searches for them in the
debug information.
There are also a variety of logging fixes, and I made two
changes to the test suite:
- Enabled a test case for Objective-C properties in the
current translation unit.
- Added a test case for calling Objective-C class methods
when stopped in a class method.
llvm-svn: 144607
This is the actual fix for the above radar where global variables that weren't
initialized were not being shown correctly when leaving the DWARF in the .o
files. Global variables that aren't intialized have symbols in the .o files
that specify they are undefined and external to the .o file, yet document the
size of the variable. This allows the compiler to emit a single copy, but makes
it harder for our DWARF in .o files with the executable having a debug map
because the symbol for the global in the .o file doesn't exist in a section
that we can assign a fixed up linked address to, and also the DWARF contains
an invalid address in the "DW_OP_addr" location (always zero). This means that
the DWARF is incorrect and actually maps all such global varaibles to the
first file address in the .o file which is usually the first function. So we
can fix this in either of two ways: make a new fake section in the .o file
so that we have a file address in the .o file that we can relink, or fix the
the variable as it is created in the .o file DWARF parser and actually give it
the file address from the executable. Each variable contains a
SymbolContextScope, or a single pointer that helps us to recreate where the
variables came from (which module, file, function, etc). This context helps
us to resolve any file addresses that might be in the location description of
the variable by pointing us to which file the file address comes from, so we
can just replace the SymbolContextScope and also fix up the location, which we
would have had to do for the other case as well, and update the file address.
Now globals display correctly.
The above changes made it possible to determine if a variable is a global
or static variable when parsing DWARF. The DWARF emits a DW_TAG_variable tag
for each variable (local, global, or static), yet DWARF provides no way for
us to classify these variables into these categories. We can now detect when
a variable has a simple address expressions as its location and this will help
us classify these correctly.
While making the above changes I also noticed that we had two symbol types:
eSymbolTypeExtern and eSymbolTypeUndefined which mean essentially the same
thing: the symbol is not defined in the current object file. Symbol objects
also have a bit that specifies if a symbol is externally visible, so I got
rid of the eSymbolTypeExtern symbol type and moved all code locations that
used it to use the eSymbolTypeUndefined type.
llvm-svn: 144489
interfaces. This allows us to pull in Objective-C
method types on demand, which is also now implemented.
Also added a minor fix to prevent multiple-definition
errors for "Class" and "id".
llvm-svn: 144405
lookups for Objective-C methods by selector.
Right now all it does is print log information.
Also improved the logging for imported TagDecls
to indicate whether or not the definition for
the imported TagDecl is complete.
llvm-svn: 144203
which will in the future allow expressions to be
compiled as C, C++, and Objective-C instead of the
current default Objective-C++. This feature requires
some additional support from Clang -- specifically, it
requires reference types in the parser regardless of
language -- so it is not yet exposed to the user.
llvm-svn: 144042
C++ vtables, fixing a record layout problem in the
expression parser.
Also fixed various problems with the generation
and unpacking of llvm.zip given our new better
handling of multiple architectures in the LLVM
build.
(And added a log message that will hopefully catch
record layout problems in the future.)
llvm-svn: 143741
target is stopped in a C++ or Objective-C method
but the "self" pointer's valid range actually
doesn't cover the current location. Before, that
was confusing Clang to the point where it crashed;
now, we sanity-check and fall back to pretending
we're in a C function if "self" or "this" isn't
available.
llvm-svn: 143676
IRInterpreter to get the value, not the location,
of references. The location of a reference has
type T&&, which is meaningless to Clang.
llvm-svn: 143592
allows us to set __attribute__ ((used)) on expressions
that masquerade as methods. When we are stopped in
classes in anonymous namespaces, this fix (and enabling
__attribute__ ((used)) on the method) will allow
expressions to run.
llvm-svn: 143560
generated special member functions (constructors,
destructors, etc.) for classes that don't really have
them. We needed to mark these as artificial to reflect
the debug information; this bug does that for
constructors and destructors.
The "etc." case (certain assignment operators, mostly)
remains to be fixed.
llvm-svn: 143526
correctly, and added a testcase to check that it works.
The main problem here is that Objective-C class method
selectors are external references stored in a special
data structure in the LLVM IR module for an expression.
I just had to extract them and ensure that the real
class object locations were properly resolved.
llvm-svn: 143520
method as __attribute__ ((used)) when adding it to a
class. This functionality is useful when stopped in
anonymous namespaces: expressions attached to classes
in anonymous namespaces are typically elided by Clang's
CodeGen because they have no namespaces are intended
not to be externally visible. __attribute__ ((used))
forces CodeGen to emit the function.
Right now, __attribute__ ((used)) causes the JIT not to
emit the function, so we're not enabling it until we
fix that.
llvm-svn: 143469
"object borked"... Also made the error when the checker fails reflect this fact rather than
report a crash at 0x0.
Also a little cleanup:
- StopInfoMachException had a redundant copy of the description string.
- ThreadPlanCallFunction had a redundant copy of the thread, and had a
copy of the process that it didn't really need.
llvm-svn: 143419
detecting Objective-C method calls because the
"lldb.call.realName" metadata was no longer
being correctly installed. I fixed this problem.
llvm-svn: 143371
ClangExpressionDeclMap to ClangASTSource, and
moved all general type and namespace lookups
into ClangASTSource. Now ClangASTSource is ready
to complete types given nothing more than a target
and an AST context.
llvm-svn: 143292
AST importer on completing namespace mappings from
ClangExpressionDeclMap to ClangASTSource.
ClangASTSource now contains a TargetSP which it
uses to lookup namespaces in all of a target's
modules. I will use the TargetSP in the future to
look up globals.
llvm-svn: 143275
allow it to complete types on behalf of any AST context
(including the "scratch" AST context associated with
the target), I scrapped its role as intermediary between
the Clang parser and ClangExpressionDeclMap, and instead
made ClangExpressionDeclMap inherit from ClangASTSource.
After this, I will migrate the functions that complete
types and perform namespace lookups from
ClangExpressionDeclMap to ClangASTSource. Ultimately
ClangExpressionDeclMap's only responsiblity will be to
look up variables and ensure that they are materialized
and dematerialized correctly.
llvm-svn: 143253
of reference types. Previously, such variables were
materialized as references to those references, which
caused undesried behavior in Clang and was useless anyway
(the benefit of using references to variables is that it
allows expressions to modify variables in place, but for
references that's not required).
Now we just materialize the references directly, which
fixes a variety of expressions that use references.
llvm-svn: 143137
"_cmd", "this", and "self". These variables are handled
differently from all other external variables used by
the expression. Other variables are used indirectly
through the $__lldb_arg operand; only _cmd, this, and
self are passed directly through the ABI.
There are two modifications:
- I added a function to ClangExpressionDeclMap that
retrives the value of one of these variables by name;
and
- I made IRInterpreter fetch these values when needed,
and ensured that the proper level of indirection is
used.
llvm-svn: 143065
types of the same name. If a local variable with the
given name is found (and we are not searching a
specific namespace) we stop right then and there and
report it.
llvm-svn: 142962
parser. Now expression like the following work as
expected:
-
(lldb) expr struct { int a; int b; } $blah = { 10, 20 }
<no result>
(lldb) expr $blah
(<anonymous struct at Parse:6:5>) $blah = {
(int) a = 10
(int) b = 20
}
-
Now the IRForTarget subsystem knows how to handle
static initializers of various composite types.
Also removed an unnecessary parameter from
ClangExpressionDeclMap::GetFunctionInfo.
llvm-svn: 142936
for debug information that occasionally gets the
const-ness of member functions wrong. We used to
demangle the name, add "const," and remangle it; now
we handle the mangled name directly, which is more
robust.
llvm-svn: 142933
permits a namespace map to be created and populated
when the namespace is imported, not just when it is
requested via FindExternalVisibleDecls().
llvm-svn: 142690
of arbitrary pointers, allowing direct dereferences
of literal addresses. Also disabled special-cased
generation of certain expression results (especially
casts), substituting the IR interpreter.
llvm-svn: 142638
std::string and modified all places that used the std::string it returned
to use the "const char *".
Also modified the expression parser to not crash when a function type fails
to copy into the expression AST context.
llvm-svn: 142561
we never used) with a much simpler class that wraps
the relevant dump functions in Clang. This class also
knows to disable external lookups on DeclContexts
being dumped so it should be safe to print incomplete
Decls.
llvm-svn: 142359
FindExternalVisibleDecls and FindExternalLexicalDecls
are marked and given unique IDs, so that all logging
done as part of their execution can be traced back to
the proper call.
Also there was some logging that really wasn't helpful
in most cases so I disabled it unless verbose logging
(log enable -v lldb expr) is enabled.
llvm-svn: 141987
make it easier to track down which members belong
to which structs (and which call to
FindExternalLexicalDecls is doing the reporting).
llvm-svn: 141930
Specifically, the expression parser used to use
functions attached to SymbolContext to do lookups,
but nowadays it searches a ModuleList or Module
directly instead. These functions had no
remaining clients so I removed them to prevent
bit rot.
I also removed a stray callback function from
ClangExpressionDeclMap.
llvm-svn: 141899
which had previously been commented out while I tested
it. It's not fully working yet, but it doesn't break
our testsuite and it's an important piece of
functionality.
Also added some logging to SymbolFileDWARF to help
diagnose entities that are found in a symbol file,
but do not reside in the expected namespace.
llvm-svn: 141894
context object. Having it populated and registered
within a single FindExternalVisibleDecls call worked
fine when there was only one call (i.e., when we were
just looking in the global namespace).
However, now FindExternalVisibleDecls is called for
nested namespaces as well, which means that it is
called not once but many times (once per module in
which the parent namespace appears). This means that
the namespace mapping is built up across many calls
to the inferior FindExternalVisibleDecls, so I moved
it into a data structure (the search context) that is
shared by all calls.
I also added some logging to make it easier to see
what is happening during a namespace search, and
cleaned up some existing logging.
llvm-svn: 141888
down through Module and SymbolVendor into SymbolFile.
Added checks to SymbolFileDWARF that restrict symbol
searches when a namespace is passed in.
llvm-svn: 141847
we don't need to look them up again when materializing.
Switched over the materialization mechanism (for JIT
expressions) and the lookup mechanism (for interpreted
expressions) to use the VariableSP/Symbol that were
found during parsing.
llvm-svn: 141839
lifetime of ClangExpressionDeclMap. This allows
ClangExpressionVariables found during parsing to be
queried for their containing namespaces during
expression execution.
Other clients (like ClangFunction) explicitly delete
this state, so they should not result in any memory
leaks.
llvm-svn: 141821
calls to the FindExternalVisibleDecls function.
FindExternalVisibleDecls was recording whether
it had found generic function symbols in variables
that were local to the function. Now, however,
multiple calls occur in response to one request
from Clang, since we may be searching across
namespaces. To support that, I moved the local
variables into a bitfield in NameSearchContext.
llvm-svn: 141808
of namespaces (only in the modules where they've
been found) for entities inside those namespaces.
For each NamespaceDecl that has been imported into
the parser, we maintain a map containing
[ModuleSP, ClangNamespaceDecl] pairs in the ASTImporter.
This map has one entry for each module in which the
namespace has been found. When we later scan for an
entity inside a namespace, we search only the modules
in which that namespace was found.
Also made a small whitespace fix in
ClangExpressionParser.cpp.
llvm-svn: 141748
This involved minor changes to the way we report Objective-C
methods, as well as cosmetic changes and added parameters
for a variety of Clang APIs.
llvm-svn: 141437
expression into a separate class. This class
encapsulates wrapping the function as needed. I
am also moving from using booleans to indicate
what the expression's language should be to using
lldb::LanguageType instead.
llvm-svn: 140545
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
it to generate result variables that were not bound
to their underlying data. This allowed the SBValue
class to use the interpreter (if possible).
Also made sure that any result variables that point
to stack allocations in the stack frame of the
interpreted expressions do not get live data.
llvm-svn: 140285
allocate memory in a process that did not support
expression execution. Also improved detection of
whether or not a process can execute expressions.
llvm-svn: 140202
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
__attribute__ format so the compiler knows that this method takes
printf style formatter arguments and checks that it's being used
correctly. Fix a couple dozen incorrect SetErrorStringWithFormat()
calls throughout the sources.
llvm-svn: 140115
We had some cases where getting the shared pointer for a module from
the global module list was causing a performance issue when debugging
with DWARF in .o files. Now that the module uses intrusive ref counts,
we can easily convert any pointer to a shared pointer.
llvm-svn: 139983