Summary:
Before this, each function had a copy of the code which handled appending of the thread suffix to
the packet (or using $Hg instead). I have moved that code into a single function and made
everyone else use that. The function takes the partial packet as a StreamString rvalue reference,
to avoid a copy and to remind the users that the packet will have undeterminate contents after
the call.
This also fixes the incorrect formatting of the QRestoreRegisterState packet in case thread
suffix is not supported.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23604
llvm-svn: 279040
Summary:
CPlusPlusLanguage::MethodName was not correctly parsing templated functions whose demangled name
included the return type -- the space before the function name was included in the "context" and
the context itself was not terminated correctly due to a misuse of the substr function (second
argument is length, not the end position). Fix that and add a regression test.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23608
llvm-svn: 279038
Summary:
When saving/restoring registers the GDBRemoteRegisterContext class was manually constructing
the register save/restore packets. This creates appropriate helper functions in
GDBRemoteCommunicationClient, and switches the class to use those. It also removes what a
duplicate packet send in some of those functions, a thing that I can only attribute to a bad
merge artefact.
I also add a test framework for testing gdb-remote client functionality and add tests for the new
functions I introduced. I'd like to be able to test the register context changes in isolation as
well, but currently there doesn't seem to be a way to reasonably construct a standalone register
context object, so we'll have to rely on the end-to-end tests to verify that.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23553
llvm-svn: 278915
Despite its comment, the function is only used in the Client class, and its presence was merely
complicating mock implementation in unit tests.
llvm-svn: 278785
Summary:
referencing a user-defined operator new was triggering an assert in clang because we were
registering the function name as string "operator new", instead of using the special operator
enum, which clang has for this purpose. Method operators already had code to handle this, and now
I extend this to cover free standing operator functions as well. Test included.
Reviewers: spyffe
Subscribers: sivachandra, paulherman, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17856
llvm-svn: 278670
The commit started passing a nullptr port into GDBRemoteCommunication::StartDebugserverProcess.
The function was mostly handling the null value correctly, but it one case it did not check it's
value before assigning to it. Fix that.
llvm-svn: 278662
This change opens a socket pair and passes the second socket pair file descriptor down to the debugserver binary using a new option: "--fd=N" where N is the file descriptor. This file descriptor gets passed via posix_spawn() so that there is no need to do any bind/listen or bind/accept calls and eliminates the hanshake unix socket that is used to pass the result of the actual port that ends up being used so it can save time on launch as well as being faster.
This is currently only enabled on __APPLE__ builds. Other OSs should try modifying the #define from ProcessGDBRemote.cpp but the first person will need to port the --fd option over to lldb-server. Any OSs that enable USE_SOCKETPAIR_FOR_LOCAL_CONNECTION in their native builds can use the socket pair stuff. The #define is Apple only right now, but looks like:
#if defined (__APPLE__)
#define USE_SOCKETPAIR_FOR_LOCAL_CONNECTION 1
#endif
<rdar://problem/27814880>
llvm-svn: 278524
Options used to store a reference to the CommandInterpreter instance
in the base Options class. This made it impossible to parse options
independent of a CommandInterpreter.
This change removes the reference from the base class. Instead, it
modifies the options-parsing-related methods to take an
ExecutionContext pointer, which the options may inspect if they need
to do so.
Closes https://reviews.llvm.org/D23416
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
llvm-svn: 278440
Factor out some common logic used to find the runtime library in a list
of modules.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23150
llvm-svn: 278368
Adapters for instrumentation runtimes have to do two basic things:
1) Load a runtime library.
2) Install breakpoints in that library.
This logic is duplicated in the adapters for asan and tsan. Factor it
out and document bits of it to make it easier to add new adapters.
I tested this with check-lldb, and double-checked
testcases/functionalities/{a,t}san.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23043
llvm-svn: 278367
It's always hard to remember when to include this file, and
when you do include it it's hard to remember what preprocessor
check it needs to be behind, and then you further have to remember
whether it's windows.h or win32.h which you need to include.
This patch changes the name to PosixApi.h, which is more appropriately
named, and makes it independent of any preprocessor setting.
There's still the issue of people not knowing when to include this,
because there's not a well-defined set of things it exposes other
than "whatever is missing on Windows", but at least this should
make it less painful to fix when problems arise.
This patch depends on LLVM revision r278170.
llvm-svn: 278177
Resumbitting the commit after fixing the following problems:
- broken unit tests on windows: incorrect gtest usage on my part (TEST vs. TEST_F)
- the new code did not correctly handle the case where we went to interrupt the process, but it
stopped due to a different reason - the interrupt request would remain queued and would
interfere with the following "continue". I also added a unit test for this case.
This reapplies r277156 and r277139.
llvm-svn: 278118
also take the opportunity to replace NULL with nullptr and add clang-format guards to prevent it
from messing up the nice table there.
llvm-svn: 278005
It only contained a reimplementation of std::to_string, which I have replaced with usages of
pre-existing llvm::to_string (also, injecting members into the std namespace is evil).
llvm-svn: 278000
Also re-write how most of the directory indexing is done - as it has
grown over the years, it has become a bit of a mess and was overdue
for a cleanup.
Most importantly, this allows you to specify a directory with the
platform.plugin.darwin-kernel.kext-directories setting and now lldb
will search for kexts and kernels in those directories recursively.
<rdar://problem/20754467>
llvm-svn: 277789
Due to internal reuse of buffers in the RenderScript runtime by the system allocator,
comparing pointers is not a safe way to check whether an allocation is tracked by lldb.
This change updates the lldb RenderScript internal hook callback to properly
identify and remove old allocations that had have an address that is currently
being tracked.
This change also removes the need for `lldb_private::renderscript::LookupAllocation`
to take a `create` flag, as this is now always the case.
Original Author: <dean@codeplay.com>
Subscribers: lldb-commits
llvm-svn: 277613
``num_params`` was unused in RenderScript ABI fixup pass ``cloneToStructRetFnTy``
and was only used in an `assert()` that the number of function parameters for the cloned
function was correct.
Now we actually use this variable, rather than recomputing it, and avoid the unused variable
warning when building without asserts enabled.
Subscribers: lldb-commits
llvm-svn: 277608
This introduces basic support for debugging OCaml binaries.
Use of the native compiler with DWARF emission support (see
https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml/pull/574) is required.
Available variables are considered as 64 bits unsigned integers,
their interpretation will be left to a OCaml-made debugging layer.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22132
llvm-svn: 277443
This reverts commit r277139, because:
- broken unittest on windows (likely typo on my part)
- seems to break TestCallThatRestart (needs investigation)
llvm-svn: 277154
Summary:
There were places in the code, assuming(hardcoding) offsets
and types that were only valid for the x86_64 elf core file format.
The NT_PRSTATUS and NT_PRPSINFO structures are with the 64 bit layout.
I have reused them and parse i386 files manually, and fill them in the
same struct.
Also added some error handling during parsing that checks if the
available bytes in the buffer are enough to fill the structures.
The i386 core file test case now passes.
For reference on the structures layout, I generally used the
source of binutils (bfd, readelf)
Bug: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=26947
Reviewers: labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22917
llvm-svn: 277140
SendContinuePacketAndWaitForResponse was huge function with very complex interactions with
several other functions (SendAsyncSignal, SendInterrupt, SendPacket). This meant that making any
changes to how packet sending functions and threads interact was very difficult and error-prone.
This change does not add any functionality yet, it merely paves the way for future changes. In a
follow-up, I plan to add the ability to have multiple query packets in flight (i.e.,
request,request,response,response instead of the usual request,response sequences) and use that
to speed up qModuleInfo packet processing.
Here, I introduce two special kinds of locks: ContinueLock, which is used by the continue thread,
and Lock, which is used by everyone else. ContinueLock (atomically) sends a continue packet, and
blocks any other async threads from accessing the connection. Other threads create an instance of
the Lock object when they want to access the connection. This object, while in scope prevents the
continue from being send. Optionally, it can also interrupt the process to gain access to the
connection for async processing.
Most of the syncrhonization logic is encapsulated within these two classes. Some of it still
had to bleed over into the SendContinuePacketAndWaitForResponse, but the function is still much
more manageable than before -- partly because of most of the work is done in the ContinueLock
class, and partly because I have factored out a lot of the packet processing code separate
functions (this also makes the functionality more easily testable). Most importantly, there is
none of syncrhonization code in the async thread users -- as far as they are concerned, they just
need to declare a Lock object, and they are good to go (SendPacketAndWaitForResponse is now a
very thin wrapper around the NoLock version of the function, whereas previously it had over 100
lines of synchronization code). This will make my follow up changes there easy.
I have written a number of unit tests for the new code and I have ran the test suite on linux and
osx with no regressions.
Subscribers: tberghammer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22629
llvm-svn: 277139
that it finds on the local computer in "well known" locations
when we start up the darwin-kernel platform. It did not
distinguish between kexts/kernels with dSYMs from others -
when it needed a kernel/kext with a given UUID, it would grab
the first one it finds.
This change separates these into two vectors -- a collection
of kexts and kernels with dSYMs next t othem, and a collection
of kexts and kernels without dSYMs. When we have a bundle ID
and uuid to search for, we first try the collections with
dSYMs, and if that fails, then we try the collections that
did not have dSYMs next to them.
Often times we'll have a situation where a kext will be
installed in multiple locations on a system, but only one
of them will have a dSYM next to it, where the dev just copied
it to a local directory. This fixes that problem, giving
precedence to those binaries with debug information.
llvm-svn: 277123
cache from ObjectFileMachO (very wrong place) to the DynamicLoader
plugins (better place). Not much change to the code itself, although
the old ObjectFileMachO method would try both the new dyld SPI and
reading the dyld_all_image_infos structure. In the new methods,
I've separated those into the appropriate DynamicLoader plugins.
llvm-svn: 277088
Greg added in r272276 -- when working with a non-user-process mach-o
core file, force the permissions to readable + executable, else the
unwinder can stop backtracing early if it gets a pc value in a segment
that it thinks is non-executable.
<rdar://problem/27138456>
<rdar://problem/27462904>
llvm-svn: 277065
This finally removes the use of the Mutex and Condition classes. This is an
intricate patch as the Mutex and Condition classes were tied together.
Furthermore, many places had slightly differing uses of time values. Convert
timeout values to relative everywhere to permit the use of
std::chrono::duration, which is required for the use of
std::condition_variable's timeout. Adjust all Condition and related Mutex
classes over to std::{,recursive_}mutex and std::condition_variable.
This change primarily comes at the cost of breaking the TracingMutex which was
based around the Mutex class. It would be possible to write a wrapper to
provide similar functionality, but that is beyond the scope of this change.
llvm-svn: 277011
Expression evaluation for function calls to certain public RenderScript
API functions in libRSCPURef can segfault.
`slang`,
the compiler frontend for RenderScript embeds an ARM specific triple in
IR that is shipped in the app, after generating IR that has some
assumptions that an ARM device is the target.
As the IR is then compiled on a device of unknown (at time the IR was
generated at least) architecture, when calling RenderScript API function
as part of debugger expressions, we have to perform a fixup pass that
removes those assumptions right before the module is sent to be
generated by the llvm backend.
This issue is caused by multiple problems with the ARMv7-specific
assumptions encoded in the LLVM IR. x86 large value returns use a hidden
first argument (mapping to llvm::Attribute::StructRet), which can't be
picked up by the JIT due to the mismatch between IR generated by the
slang frontend and llvm backend. This means that code generated by bcc
did not necessarily match the default SysV Linux/Android ABI used by the
LLDB JIT
- Original Authors: Luke Drummond (@ldrumm), Function declarations fixed by Aidan Dodds (@ADodds)
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18059
llvm-svn: 276976
Summary:
We were checking whether an attribute is in block form by getting the block data pointer, which
was not correct as the pointer be null even if the attribute is in block form. Other places in
the file already use the correct test.
To make this work, I've needed to add DW_FORM_exprlock to the list of "block" forms, which seems
correct as that is how we are parsing it.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22756
llvm-svn: 276735
that may be embedded in the Contents/Resources subdir of a dSYM
bundle. These allow for the specification of a build-time path
to debug-time path remapping for source files. Files may be built
in /BuildDirectory/sources/project-100 but when the debugger is
run, they're actually found via ~sources/project-100 - this plist
allows for that remapping through the DBGBuildSourcePath and
DBGSourcePath keys.
This patch adds support for a new DBGSourcePathRemapping
dictionary in the plist where the keys are the build-time paths
and the values are the debug-time paths that they should be
remapped to. There are instances were we have multiple possible
build-time paths that need to be included, so the dictionary was
required.
<rdar://problem/26725174>
llvm-svn: 276729
"Incorrect" file name seen on Android whene the main executable is
called "app_process32" (or 64) but the linker specifies the package
name (e.g. com.android.calculator2). Additionally it can be present
in case of some linker bugs.
This CL adds logic to try to fetch the correct file name from the proc
file system based on the base address sepcified by the linker in case
we are failed to load the module by name.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22219
llvm-svn: 276411
Summary:
The binary layout of prstatus and prpsinfo was wrong.
Some of the member variables where not aligned properly
and others where with a wrong type (e.g. the time related
stuff in prstatus).
I used the structs defined in bfd in binutils to see what the layout
of the elf-core format in these section is.
(https://sourceware.org/git/?p=binutils-gdb.git;a=blob;f=bfd/hosts/x86-64linux.h;h=4e420a1f2081dd3b51f5d6b7a8e4093580f5cdb5;hb=master)
Note: those structures are only for x86 64 bit elf-core files
This shouldn't have any impact on the functionality, because
lldb actually uses only a few of the member variables of those structs
and they are with a correct type and alignment.
I found this while trying to add/fix the support for
i386 core files (https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=26947)
Reviewers: labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22628
Author: Dimitar Vlahovski <dvlahovski@google.com>
llvm-svn: 276406
debugserver jGetSharedCacheInfo packet instead of reading
the dyld internal data structures directly. This code is
(currently) only used for ios native lldb's - I should really
move this ObjectFileMachO::GetProcessSharedCacheUUID method
somewhere else, it makes less and less sense being in the
file reader.
<rdar://problem/25251243>
llvm-svn: 276369
Summary:
We've had two copies of code for launching processes:
- one in NativeProcessLinux, used for launching debugged processes
- one in ProcessLauncherAndroid, used on android for launching all other kinds of processes
These have over time acquired support for various launch options, but neither supported all of
them. I now replace them with a single implementation ProcessLauncherLinux, which supports all
the options the individual versions supported and set it to be used to launch all processes on
linux.
This also works around the ETXTBSY issue on android when the process is started from the platform
instance, as that used to go through the version which did not contain the workaround.
Reviewers: tberghammer
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22457
llvm-svn: 276288
for the fall (northern hemisphere) 2016 Darwin platforms to learn
about loaded images, instead of reading dyld internal data structures.
These new SPI don't exist on older releases, and new packets are
needed from debugserver to use them (those changes are already committed).
I had to change the minimum deployment target for debugserver in the xcode
project file to macOS 10.10 so that debugserver will use the
[[NSProcessInfo processInfo] operatingSystemVersion]
call in MachProcess::GetOSVersionNumbers to get the operarting system
version # -- this API is only available in macOS 10.10 and newer
("OS X Yosemite", released Oct 2014). If we have many people building
llvm.org lldb on older systems still, we can back off on this for the
llvm.org sources.
There should be no change in behavior with this commit, either to
older darwin systems or newer darwin systems.
For now the new DynamicLoader plugin is never activated - I'm forcing
the old plugin to be used in DynamicLoaderDarwin::UseDYLDSPI.
I'll remove that unconditional use of the old plugin soon, so the
newer plugin is used on the newest Darwin platforms.
<rdar://problem/25251243>
llvm-svn: 276254
Only ever warn about missing ObjC runtime class data if one either can't run the expressions to obtain such data, or the total count of classes is below a threshold that makes things sound really suspicious
Fixes rdar://27438500
llvm-svn: 276220
They will dump pretty-print (indentation, extra whitepsace) by default.
I'll make a change to ProcessGDBRemote soon so it stops sending JSON strings
to debugserver pretty-printed; it's unnecessary extra bytes being sent between
the two.
llvm-svn: 276079
Summary:
This patch fills in the implementation of GetMemoryRegions() on the Windows live process and minidump implementations of lldb_private::Process (ProcessWindowsLive::GetMemoryRegionInfo and ProcessWinMiniDump::Impl::GetMemoryRegionInfo.) The GetMemoryRegions API was added under: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20565
The existing Windows implementations didn’t fill in the start and end addresses within MemoryRegionInfo. This patch fixes that and adds support for the new mapped flag on MemoryRegionInfo that says whether a memory range is mapped into the process address space or not.
The behaviour of both live and core implementations should match the behaviour documented on Process::GetMemoryRegionInfo (in Process.h) which in turn should match the behaviour of the qMemoryRegionInfo query documented in lldb-gdb-remote.txt.
Reviewers: clayborg, amccarth
Subscribers: amccarth, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22352
llvm-svn: 275778
a base class and a derived class, with the derived class containing
the methods specific to reading dyld's all_image_infos, dyld's
method of specifying images that have been loaded or unloaded, the
place where we put a breakpoint in dyld to get notified about newly
loaded or unloaded images.
This is in preparation for a second derived class which will use
some alternate methods for getting this information; that will be
a separate commit in the next few days.
There's a couple of ivars that should probably be in the derived
DyanmicLoaderMacOSX class instead of the base DynamicLoaderDarwin
class (m_dyld_image_infos, m_dyld_image_infos_stop_id). I don't
think I'll need to use these in the new derived class - I'll
move them down to DynamicLoaderMacOSX if it works out that way;
it'll simplify locking if I can do that.
<rdar://problem/25251243>
llvm-svn: 275733
Summary:
This removes one level of indirection, which was just packing and repacking launch args into
different structures. NFC.
Reviewers: tberghammer
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22357
llvm-svn: 275544
review it for consistency, accuracy, and clarity. These changes attempt to
address all of the above while keeping the text relatively terse.
<rdar://problem/24868841>
llvm-svn: 275485
Changes to the underlying logging infrastructure in Fall 2016 Darwin
OSes were no longer showing up NSLog messages in command-line LLDB.
This change restores that functionality, and adds test cases to
verify the new behavior.
rdar://26732492
llvm-svn: 275472
Summary:
The function FunctionCaller::WriteFunctionArguments returns false on
errors, so they should check for the false return value.
Change by Walter Erquinigo <a20012251@gmail.com>
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22278
llvm-svn: 275287
Loading a dynamic library can take quite a long time, since it triggers a number of
shared-library-event stops for dependent libraries. This is especially true for remote targets
due to communication latency. Increase the default 500ms timeout to account for that.
Committing as obvious.
llvm-svn: 275185
Summary:
void typedefs do not have a DW_AT_type attribute, so we end up with an empty encoding_uid
variable. These don't need to be looked up and trying to look that will assert in a debug build.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, tberghammer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22218
llvm-svn: 275164
If LLDB reads some incorrect input form /proc/<pid>/maps then it
should report an error instead of assert-ing as we don't want to
crash in case of an incorrect maps file.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22211
llvm-svn: 275060
This feature was added to solve a lookup problem in expressions when local variables
shadow ivars. That solution requires fully realizing all local variables to evaluate
any expression, and can cause significant performance problems when evaluating
expressions in frames that have many complex locals.
Until we get a better solution, this setting mitigates the problem when you don't
have local variables that shadow ivars.
<rdar://problem/27226122>
llvm-svn: 274783
When multiple Android devices are attached, the default behaviour of ADB
is to resolve a device number based on the presence of ANDROID_SERIAL if
the serial number is not explicitly passed by the -s parameter. This patch
emulates that behaviour in lldb's ADB platform connector
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22052
llvm-svn: 274776
On android M it can happen that we get a ETXTBSY, when we try to launch the inferior. Sleeping
and retrying should help us get more stable results.
llvm-svn: 274763
Summary:
This patch fills in the implementation of GetMemoryRegions() on the Linux and Mac OS core file implementations of lldb_private::Process (ProcessElfCore::GetMemoryRegions and ProcessMachCore::GetMemoryRegions.) The GetMemoryRegions API was added under: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20565
The patch re-uses the m_core_range_infos list that was recently added to implement GetMemoryRegionInfo in both ProcessElfCore and ProcessMachCore to ensure the returned regions match the regions returned by Process::GetMemoryRegionInfo(addr_t load_addr, MemoryRegionInfo ®ion_info).
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: labath, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21751
llvm-svn: 274741
- if a synthetic child comes from the same hierarchy as its parent object, then it can't be cached by SharedPointer inside the synthetic provider, or it will cause a reference loop;
- but, if a synthetic child is made from whole cloth (e.g. from an expression, a memory region, ...), then it better be cached by SharedPointer, or it will be cleared out and cause an assert() to fail if used at a later point
For most cases of self-rooted synthetic children, we have a flag we set "IsSyntheticChildrenGenerated", but we were not using it to track caching. So, what ended up happening is each provider would set up its own cache, and if it got it wrong, a hard to diagnose crash would ensue
This patch fixes that by centralizing caching in ValueObjectSynthetic - if a provider returns a self-rooted child (as per the flag), then it gets cached centrally by the ValueObject itself
This cache is used only for lifetime management and not later retrieval of child values - a different cache handles that (because we might have a mix of self-rooted and properly nested child values for the same parent, we can't trivially use this lifetime cache for retrieval)
Fixes rdar://26480007
llvm-svn: 274683
Summary:
We are seeing infrequent failures to launch the inferior process on android. The failing call
seems to be execve(). This adds more logging to see the actual error reported by the call.
Reviewers: tberghammer
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits, danalbert
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22039
llvm-svn: 274624
I changed "m_is_optimized" in lldb_private::CompileUnit over to be a lldb::LazyBool so that it can be set to eLazyBoolCalculate if it needs to be parsed later. With SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap, we don't actually open the DWARF in the .o files for each compile unit until later, and we can't tell if a compile unit is optimized ahead of time. So to avoid pulling in all .o right away just so we can answer the questions of "is this compile unit optimized" we defer it until a point where we will have the compile unit parsed.
<rdar://problem/26068360>
llvm-svn: 274585
These are artifical symbols inside android oat files without any value
for the user while causing a significant perfoamce hit inside the
unwinder. We were already ignoring it inside system@framework@boot.oat
bot they have to be ignored in every oat file. Considering that oat
files are only used on android this have no effect on any other
platfrom.
llvm-svn: 274500