This is forcing to use Error::success(), which is in a wide majority
of cases a lot more readable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26481
llvm-svn: 286561
I added a "thread-stop-format" to distinguish between the form
that is just the thread info (since the stop printing immediately prints
the frame info) and one with more frame 0 info - which is useful for
"thread list" and the like.
I also added a frame.no-debug boolean to the format entities so you can
print frame information differently between frames with source info and those
without.
This closes https://reviews.llvm.org/D26383.
<rdar://problem/28273697>
llvm-svn: 286288
Summary:
"Initialization of function-local statics is guaranteed to occur only once even when called from
multiple threads, and may be more efficient than the equivalent code using std::call_once."
<http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/thread/call_once>
I'd add that it's also more readable.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17710
llvm-svn: 284601
This change is very mechanical. All it does is change the
signature of `Options::GetDefinitions()` and `OptionGroup::
GetDefinitions()` to return an `ArrayRef<OptionDefinition>`
instead of a `const OptionDefinition *`. In the case of the
former, it deletes the sentinel entry from every table, and
in the case of the latter, it removes the `GetNumDefinitions()`
method from the interface. These are no longer necessary as
`ArrayRef` carries its own length.
In the former case, iteration was done by using a sentinel
entry, so there was no knowledge of length. Because of this
the individual option tables were allowed to be defined below
the corresponding class (after all, only a pointer was needed).
Now, however, the length must be known at compile time to
construct the `ArrayRef`, and as a result it is necessary to
move every option table before its corresponding class. This
results in this CL looking very big, but in terms of substance
there is not much here.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24834
llvm-svn: 282188
This patch also marks the const char* versions as =delete to prevent
their use. This has the potential to cause build breakages on some
platforms which I can't compile. I have tested on Windows, Linux,
and OSX. Best practices for fixing broken callsites are outlined in
Args.h in a comment above the deleted function declarations.
Eventually we can remove these =delete declarations, but for now they
are important to make sure that all implicit conversions from
const char * are manually audited to make sure that they do not invoke a
conversion from nullptr.
llvm-svn: 281919
*** to conform to clang-format’s LLVM style. This kind of mass change has
*** two obvious implications:
Firstly, merging this particular commit into a downstream fork may be a huge
effort. Alternatively, it may be worth merging all changes up to this commit,
performing the same reformatting operation locally, and then discarding the
merge for this particular commit. The commands used to accomplish this
reformatting were as follows (with current working directory as the root of
the repository):
find . \( -iname "*.c" -or -iname "*.cpp" -or -iname "*.h" -or -iname "*.mm" \) -exec clang-format -i {} +
find . -iname "*.py" -exec autopep8 --in-place --aggressive --aggressive {} + ;
The version of clang-format used was 3.9.0, and autopep8 was 1.2.4.
Secondly, “blame” style tools will generally point to this commit instead of
a meaningful prior commit. There are alternatives available that will attempt
to look through this change and find the appropriate prior commit. YMMV.
llvm-svn: 280751
The commit introduced an array of const objects, which libstdc++ does not like. Make the object
non-const.
Also fix a compiler warning while I'm in there.
llvm-svn: 280697
When a process stops due to a crash, we get the crashing instruction and the
crashing memory location (if there is one). From the user's perspective it is
often unclear what the reason for the crash is in a symbolic sense.
To address this, I have added new fuctionality to StackFrame to parse the
disassembly and reconstruct the sequence of dereferneces and offsets that were
applied to a known variable (or fuction retrn value) to obtain the invalid
pointer.
This makes use of enhancements in the disassembler, as well as new information
provided by the DWARF expression infrastructure, and is exposed through a
"frame diagnose" command. It is also used to provide symbolic information, when
available, in the event of a crash.
The algorithm is very rudimentary, and it needs a bunch of work, including
- better parsing for assembly, preferably with help from LLVM
- support for non-Apple platforms
- cleanup of the algorithm core, preferably to make it all work in terms of
Operands instead of register/offset pairs
- improvement of the GetExpressioPath() logic to make prettier expression
paths, and
- better handling of vtables.
I welcome all suggestios, improvements, and testcases.
llvm-svn: 280692
Take 2, with missing cmake line fixed. Build tested on
Ubuntu 14.04 with clang-3.6.
See docs/structured_data/StructuredDataPlugins.md for details.
differential review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22976
reviewers: clayborg, jingham
llvm-svn: 279202
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
The commit accidentally switched a timed wait on a condition variable into an infinite timeout.
Change that back. Android tests were timeing out without this.
llvm-svn: 277133
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
We were just checking the public state, but that meant if you were hung in a long
running hand-called function, we wouldn't know to interrupt the process, and we would
not succeed in killing it.
<rdar://problem/24805082>
llvm-svn: 276795
Summary:
Process::SetExitStatus was popping the process io handler and resetting m_process_input_reader
shared pointer, which is not a safe thing to do as the function is called asynchronously and
other threads may be accessing the member variable. (E.g. if the process terminates really
quickly, the private state thread might only be in the process of pushing the handler on the
stack. Sometimes, this leads to deadlock, as the shared pointer's state gets corrupted by the
concurrent access.
Since the IOHandler will be popped anyway in Process:HandleProcessStateChangedEvent when the
exited event gets processed, doing the same in SetExitStatus seems to be unnecessary.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22209
llvm-svn: 275165
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
This patch fixes various races between the time the private state thread is signaled to exit and the time it actually exits (during which it no longer responds to events). Previously, this was consistently causing 2-second timeout delays on process detach/stop for us.
This also prevents crashes that were caused by the thread controlling its own owning pointer while the controller was using it (copying the thread wrapper is not enough to mitigate this, since the internal thread object was getting reset anyway). Again, we were seeing this consistently.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21296
llvm-svn: 272682
What with all sorts of folks (TSAN, ASAN, queue detection, etc...) trying to
gather info by calling functions down in the lower layers of lldb, we've started
to see people running expressions simultaneously. The expression evaluation part
is okay, but only one RunThreadPlan can be active at a time. I added a lock to
enforce that.
<rdar://problem/26431072>
llvm-svn: 270593
One of the things slowing us down is that ItaniumABILanguageRuntime class doesn't cache vtable to types in a map. This causes us, on every step, for every variable, to read the first pointer in a C++ type that could be dynamic and lookup the symbol, possibly in every symbol file (some symbols files on Darwin can end up having thousands of .o files when using DWARF in .o files, so thousands of .o files are searched each time).
This fix caches lldb_private::Address (the resolved vtable symbol address in section + offset format) to TypeAndOrName instances inside the one ItaniumABILanguageRuntime in a process. This allows caching of dynamic types and stops us from always doing deep searches in each file.
<rdar://problem/18890778>
llvm-svn: 270488
This is a pretty straightforward first pass over removing a number of uses of
Mutex in favor of std::mutex or std::recursive_mutex. The problem is that there
are interfaces which take Mutex::Locker & to lock internal locks. This patch
cleans up most of the easy cases. The only non-trivial change is in
CommandObjectTarget.cpp where a Mutex::Locker was split into two.
llvm-svn: 269877
The main issues were:
- Listeners recently were converted over to used by getting a shared pointer to a listener. And when they listened to broadcasters they would get a strong reference added to them meaning the listeners would never go away. This caused memory usage to increase and would cause performance issue if many steps were done.
- The lldb_private::Process private state thread had an issue where if a "stop" contol signal was attempted to be sent to that thread, it could end up not responding in 2 seconds and end up getting cancelled which might cause us to cancel a thread that had a mutex locked and it would deadlock the test.
This change makes broadcasters hold onto weak references to listeners. It also fixes some bad threading code that had races inside of it by making the m_events_mutex be non-recursive and getting rid of fragile use of a Predicate<bool> to say that new events are available, and replacing it with using the m_events_mutex with a new m_events_condition to control access to the events in a safer way.
The private state thread now uses a safer way to communicate that the control event has been received by the private state thread: it makes a EventDataReceipt instance that it attaches to the event that sends the control to the private state thread and used this to synchronize the fact that the private state thread has received the event instead of using a Predicate<bool> to convey the info. When the signal event is received, it will pull the event off of the queue in the private state thread and cause the EventData::DoOnRemoval() to be called, which will signal that the event has been received. This cleans up the signal delivery notification so it doesn't rely on a member variable of the process class to convey the info.
std::shared_ptr<EventDataReceipt> event_receipt_sp(new EventDataReceipt());
m_private_state_control_broadcaster.BroadcastEvent(signal, event_receipt_sp);
<rdar://problem/26256353> Listeners are being kept around longer than they should be due to recent changs
<rdar://problem/26256258> Private process state thread can be cancelled and cause deadlocks in test suite
llvm-svn: 269377
Summary:
This replaces the C-style "void *" baton of the child process monitoring functions with a more
C++-like API taking a std::function. The motivation for this was that it was very difficult to
handle the ownership of the object passed into the callback function -- each caller ended up
implementing his own way of doing it, some doing it better than others. With the new API, one can
just pass a smart pointer into the callback and all of the lifetime management will be handled
automatically.
This has enabled me to simplify the rather complicated handshake in Host::RunShellCommand. I have
left handling of MonitorDebugServerProcess (my original motivation for this change) to a separate
commit to reduce the scope of this change.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner, emaste, krytarowski
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20106
llvm-svn: 269205
When stopping the private state thread, there was a race condition between the time the thread exits (resetting the HostThread object) and the time a Join was attempted, especially in the case of a timeout.
The previous workaround of copying the HostThread object is not enough, since on a Reset the internal thread stuff gets nulled out regardless of which HostThread object actually has Reset called on it, resulting in an attempt to dereference a null pointer on the subsequent call to Join from the copy as well.
Additionally, there was a race between the detach (called when stopping the process) and the stop itself, causing the stop to time out because it was waiting for the private state thread to see the stop state, but it had exited immediately after entering the detached state.
Patch by cameron314
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19122
llvm-svn: 266733
This patch fixes a bunch of issues that show up on big-endian systems:
- The gnu_libstdcpp.py script doesn't follow the way libstdc++ encodes
bit vectors: it should identify the enclosing *word* and then access
the appropriate bit within that word. Instead, the script simply
operates on bytes. This gives the same result on little-endian
systems, but not on big-endian.
- lldb_private::formatters::WCharSummaryProvider always assumes wchar_t
is UTF16, even though it could also be UTF8 or UTF32. This is mostly
not an issue on little-endian systems, but immediately fails on BE.
Fixed by checking the size of wchar_t like WCharStringSummaryProvider
already does.
- ClangASTContext::GetChildCompilerTypeAtIndex uses uint32_t to access
the virtual base offset stored in the vtable, even though the size
of this field matches the target pointer size according to the C++
ABI. Again, this is mostly not visible on LE, but fails on BE.
- Process::ReadStringFromMemory uses strncmp to search for a terminator
consisting of multiple zero bytes. This doesn't work since strncmp
will stop already at the first zero byte. Use memcmp instead.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18983
llvm-svn: 266313
os to "ios" or "macosx" if it is unspecified. For environments
where there genuinely is no os, we don't want to errantly
convert that to ios/macosx, e.g. bare board debugging.
Change PlatformRemoteiOS, PlatformRemoteAppleWatch, and
PlatformRemoteAppleTV to not create themselves if we have
an unspecified OS. Same problem - these are not appropriate
platforms for bare board debugging environments.
Have Process::Attach's logging take place if either
process or target logging is enabled.
<rdar://problem/25592378>
llvm-svn: 265732
Summary:
There was a bug in linux core file handling, where if there was a running process with the same
process id as the id in the core file, the core file debugging would fail, as we would pull some
pieces of information (ProcessInfo structure) from the running process instead of the core file.
I fix this by routing the ProcessInfo requests through the Process class and overriding it in
ProcessElfCore to return correct data.
A (slightly convoluted) test is included.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18697
llvm-svn: 265391
We want to do a better job presenting errors that occur when evaluating
expressions. Key to this effort is getting away from a model where all
errors are spat out onto a stream where the client has to take or leave
all of them.
To this end, this patch adds a new class, DiagnosticManager, which
contains errors produced by the compiler or by LLDB as an expression
is created. The DiagnosticManager can dump itself to a log as well as
to a string. Clients will (in the future) be able to filter out the
errors they're interested in by ID or present subsets of these errors
to the user.
This patch is not intended to change the *users* of errors - only to
thread DiagnosticManagers to all the places where streams are used. I
also attempt to standardize our use of errors a bit, removing trailing
newlines and making clients omit 'error:', 'warning:' etc. and instead
pass the Severity flag.
The patch is testsuite-neutral, with modifications to one part of the
MI tests because it relied on "error: error:" being erroneously
printed. This patch fixes the MI variable handling and the testcase.
<rdar://problem/22864976>
llvm-svn: 263859
to each other. This should remove some infrequent teardown crashes when the
listener is not the debugger's listener.
Processes now need to take a ListenerSP, not a Listener&.
This required changing over the Process plugin class constructors to take a ListenerSP, instead
of a Listener&. Other than that there should be no functional change.
<rdar://problem/24580184> CrashTracer: [USER] Xcode at …ework: lldb_private::Listener::BroadcasterWillDestruct + 39
llvm-svn: 262863
(lldb) command_that_steps_process_thousands_of_times
As the "command_that_steps_process_thousands_of_times" could be a python command that resumed the process thousands of times and in doing so the IOHandlerProcessSTDIO would get pushed when the process resumed, and popped when it stoppped, causing the call to IOHandlerProcessSTDIO::Cancel(). Since the IOHandler thread is currently in IOHandlerEditline::Run() for the command interpreter handling the "command_that_steps_process_thousands_of_times" command, IOHandlerProcessSTDIO::Run() would never get called, even though the IOHandlerProcessSTDIO is on the top of the stack. This caused the command pipe to keep getting 1 bytes written each time the IOHandlerProcessSTDIO::Cancel() was called and eventually we will deadlock since the write buffer is full.
The fix here is to make sure we are in IOHandlerProcessSTDIO::Run() before we write anything to the command pipe, and just call SetIsDone(true) if we are not.
<rdar://problem/22361364>
llvm-svn: 262040
the xcode project file to catch switch statements that have a
case that falls through unintentionally.
Define LLVM_FALLTHROUGH to indicate instances where a case has code
and intends to fall through. This should be in llvm/Support/Compiler.h;
Peter Collingbourne originally checked in there (r237766), then
reverted (r237941) because he didn't have time to mark up all the
'case' statements that were intended to fall through. I put together
a patch to get this back in llvm http://reviews.llvm.org/D17063 but
it hasn't been approved in the past week. I added a new
lldb-private-defines.h to hold the definition for now.
Every place in lldb where there is a comment that the fall-through
is intentional, I added LLVM_FALLTHROUGH to silence the warning.
I haven't tried to identify whether the fallthrough is a bug or
not in the other places.
I haven't tried to add this to the cmake option build flags.
This warning will only work for clang.
This build cleanly (with some new warnings) on macosx with clang
under xcodebuild, but if this causes problems for people on other
configurations, I'll back it out.
llvm-svn: 260930
Seems that the patch was rebased on top of another change which obsoleted the
change but wasnt caught.
Thanks to nbjoerg for pointing this out!
llvm-svn: 258821
Address a couple of instances of -Wreturn-type warning from GCC. The switches
are covered, add an llvm_unreachable to the end of the functions to silence the
warning. NFC.
llvm-svn: 258546
Zachary introduced the 'default' case explicitly to placate a warning in
the Microsoft compiler but that broke clang with -Werror.
The new code should keep both compilers happy.
llvm-svn: 258212
with the one change that ThreadPlanStepOut::ThreadPlanStepOut
will now only advance the return address breakpoint to
the end of a source line, if we have source line debug information.
It will not advance to the end of a Symbol if we lack source line
information. This, or the recognition of the LEAVE instruction
in r257209, would have fixed the regression that Siva was seeing.
Both were good changes, so I've made both.
Original commit message:
Performance improvement: Change lldb so that it puts a breakpoint
on the first branch instruction after a function return (or the end
of a source line), instead of a breakpoint on the return address,
to skip an extra stop & start of the inferior process.
I changed Process::AdvanceAddressToNextBranchInstruction to not
take an optional InstructionList argument - no callers are providing
a cached InstructionList today, and if this function was going to
do that, the right thing to do would be to fill out / use a
DisassemblerSP which is a disassembler with the InstructionList for
this address range.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D15708
<rdar://problem/23309838>
llvm-svn: 257210
puts a breakpoint" it is causing a regression in the TestStepNoDebug
test case on ubuntu 14.04 with gcc 4.9.2. Thanks for the email
Siva. I'll recommit when I've figured out the regression.
llvm-svn: 257138
on the first branch instruction after a function return (or the end
of a source line), instead of a breakpoint on the return address,
to skip an extra stop & start of the inferior process.
I changed Process::AdvanceAddressToNextBranchInstruction to not
take an optional InstructionList argument - no callers are providing
a cached InstructionList today, and if this function was going to
do that, the right thing to do would be to fill out / use a
DisassemblerSP which is a disassembler with the InstructionList for
this address range.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D15708
<rdar://problem/23309838>
llvm-svn: 257117
Demangling complex Boost symbols can exhaust the default stack size. In practice, any thread that calls into LLDB functionality that touches symbols runs this risk. Guaranteeing a reasonable minimum for our own private state thread addressees some known scenarios debugging processes that make use of cpp-netlib.
llvm-svn: 255868
This is a resubmit of r254403, see that commit's message for context. This fixes an issue in the
original commit, where we would incorrectly interrupt the process if the interrupt request came
just as we were about to send the stopped event to the public.
llvm-svn: 254902
On android the symbols exposed by libdl (dlopen, dlclose, dlerror)
prefixed by "__dl_". This change moves the handling of process
load/unload to the platform object and override it for android to
handle the special prefix.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11465
llvm-svn: 254504
Summary:
The following situation was occuring in TestAttachResume:
- we did a "continue" from a breakpoint (which involves a private start-stop to step over the
breakpoint)
- after receiving the stop-reply from the step-over, we issue a "detach" (which requires a
process interrupt)
- at this moment, the public state is "running", private state is "about-to-be-stopped" (the
stopped event was broadcast, but it was not received yet)
- StopForDestroyOrDetach (public thread) notes the public state is running, sends an interrupt
request to the private thread
- private thread gets the eBroadcastBitInterrupt (before the eStateStopped message), and asks the
process plugin to stop (via Halt())
- process plugin says it has nothing to do as the process is already stopped
- private thread shrugs and carries on. receives the stop event, restores the breakpoint and
resumes the process.
- after a while, the public thread times out and says it failed to stop the process
This patch does the following:
- splits Halt() into two functions, private and public, their usage depends on the context
- public Halt(): sends eBroadcastBitInterrupt to the private thread and waits for the Stop
event
- HaltPrivate(): asks the plugin to stop and makes a note that the halt was requested. When the
next stop event comes it sets the interrupt flag on it.
- removes HijackPrivateProcessEvents(), as the only user (old Halt()) has gone away
- removes the m_currently_handling_event hack, as the new Halt() does not need it
- adds a use_run_lock parameter to public Halt() and WaitForProcessToStop(). This was needed
because RunThreadPlan uses Halt() while holding the run lock and we don't want Halt() to take
it away from him.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14989
llvm-svn: 254403
in places where we check for Triple::IOS. They're mostly the same as far
as lldb is conerned.
.
Also add a base cass implementation for Process::IsAlive - Greg added this
last year but it didn't get upstreamed.
llvm-svn: 252227
Summary:
The code which was preventing the usage of the OS plugin while detach is in
progress also prevented us to update the thread list correctly. This resulted
in an empty thread list, which confused the detaching logic. Change the
condition do only do what it says (disable the usage of the OS plugin).
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14201
llvm-svn: 251932
Summary:
ADB packets have a maximum size of 4k. This means the size of memory reads does not affect speed
too much (as long as it fits in one packet). Therefore, I am increasing the default memory read
size for android to 2k. This value is used only if the user has not modified the default
memory-cache-line-size setting.
Reviewers: clayborg, tberghammer
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13812
llvm-svn: 250814
Most platforms have "/dev/null". Windows has "nul". Instead of
hardcoding the string /dev/null at various places, make a constant
that contains the correct value depending on the platform, and use
that everywhere instead.
llvm-svn: 250331
* ArchSpec::MergeFrom() would erroneously promote an unspecified
unknown to a specified unknown when both the ArchSpec and the merged
in ArchSpec were both unspecified unknowns. This no longer happens,
which fixes issues with global module cache lookup in some
situations.
* Added ArchSpec::DumpTriple(Stream&) that now properly prints
unspecified unknowns as '*' and specified unknows as 'unknown'.
This makes it trivial to tell the difference between the two.
Converted printing code over ot using DumpTriple() rather than
building from scratch.
* Fixed up a couple places that were not guaranteeing that an
unspecified unknown was recorded as such.
llvm-svn: 250253
set to true, but all plans run by RunThreadPlan need to have this set to false so they will
return control to RunThreadPlan without consulting plans higher on the stack.
Since this seems like a common error, I also modified RunThreadPlan to enforce this behavior.
<rdar://problem/22543166>
llvm-svn: 250084
Summary:
The following situation occured in TestAttachResume:
The inferior was stoped at a breakpoint and we did a continue, immediately followed by a detach.
Since there was a trap instruction under the IP, the continue did a step-over-breakpoint before
resuming the inferior for real. In some cases, the detach command was executed between these two
events (after the step-over stop, but before continue). Here, public state was running, but
private state was stopped. This caused a problem because HaltForDestroyOrDetach was checking the
public state to see whether it needs to stop the process (call Halt()), but Halt() was checking
the private state and concluded that there is nothing for it to do.
Solution: Instead of Halt() call SendAsyncInterrupt(), which will then cause Halt() to be
executed in the context of the private state thread. I also rename HaltForDestroyOrDetach to
reflect it does not call halt directly.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13056
llvm-svn: 248371
The Go runtime schedules user level threads (goroutines) across real threads.
This adds an OS plugin to create memory threads for goroutines.
It supports the 1.4 and 1.5 go runtime.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5871
llvm-svn: 247852
Before we had:
ClangFunction
ClangUtilityFunction
ClangUserExpression
and code all over in lldb that explicitly made Clang-based expressions. This patch adds an Expression
base class, and three pure virtual implementations for the Expression kinds:
FunctionCaller
UtilityFunction
UserExpression
You can request one of these expression types from the Target using the Get<ExpressionType>ForLanguage.
The Target will then consult all the registered TypeSystem plugins, and if the type system that matches
the language can make an expression of that kind, it will do so and return it.
Because all of the real expression types need to communicate with their ExpressionParser in a uniform way,
I also added a ExpressionTypeSystemHelper class that expressions generically can vend, and a ClangExpressionHelper
that encapsulates the operations that the ClangExpressionParser needs to perform on the ClangExpression types.
Then each of the Clang* expression kinds constructs the appropriate helper to do what it needs.
The patch also fixes a wart in the UtilityFunction that to use it you had to create a parallel FunctionCaller
to actually call the function made by the UtilityFunction. Now the UtilityFunction can be asked to vend a
FunctionCaller that will run its function. This cleaned up a lot of boiler plate code using UtilityFunctions.
Note, in this patch all the expression types explicitly depend on the LLVM JIT and IR, and all the common
JIT running code is in the FunctionCaller etc base classes. At some point we could also abstract that dependency
but I don't see us adding another back end in the near term, so I'll leave that exercise till it is actually necessary.
llvm-svn: 247720
Summary:
There was a race condition in Process class, where we would not wait for process stdout to
propagate fully before we would shut down the connection (repro case: slow down the stdio thread
by placing a sleep right at the end of the while loop in Communication::ReadThread). The Process
class already tried to solve this problem by synchronizing with the read thread in
Process::ShouldBroadcastEvent, but unfortunately the connection got closed before that in
Process::SetExitStatus. I solve this issue by delaying the connection shutdown until we get a
chance to process the event and synchronize. Alternatively, I could have moved the
synchronization point to an earlier point in SetExitStatus, but it seems safer to delay the
shutdown until other things get a chance to notice the process has exited.
Reviewers: clayborg, ovyalov
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12558
llvm-svn: 246753
contained within Process so that we won't be duplicating the warning
message if other parts of the code want to issue the message. Change
Process::PrintWarning to be a protected method - the public method
will be the PrintWarningOptimization et al. Also, Have
Thread::FunctionOptimizationWarning shortcut out if the warnings
have been disabled so that we don't (potentially) compute parts of
the SymbolContext unnecessarily.
llvm-svn: 244436
The first part was in r243508 -- the extent of the UI changes in that
patchset was to add "[opt]" to the frame-format when a stack frame was
built with optimized code.
In this change, when a stack frame built with optimization is selected,
a message will be printed to the async output channel --
opt1.c was compiled with optimization - stepping may behave oddly; variables may not be available.
The warning will be only be printed once per source file in a debug session.
These warnings may be disabled by
settings set target.process.optimization-warnings false
Internally, a new Process::PrintWarning() method has been added for
warnings that we want to print only once to the user. It takes a type
of warning (currently only eWarningsOptimization) and an object
pointer (CompileUnit*) - the warning will only be printed once for a
given object pointer value.
This is a bit of a prototype of this change - I think we will be
tweaking it more in the future. But I wanted to land this and see
how it goes. Advanced users will find these warnings unnecessary
noise and will quickly disable them - but anyone who maintains a
debugger knows that debugging optimized code, without realizing it,
is a constant source of confusion and frustation for more typical
debugger users.
I imagine there will be more of these "warn once per whatever" style
warnings that we will want to add in the future and we'll need to
come up with a better way for enabling/disabling them. But I'm not
srue what form that warning settings should take and I didn't want
to code up something that we regret later, so for now I just added
another process setting for this one warning.
<rdar://problem/19281172>
llvm-svn: 244190
dSYMs, or reading binaries out of memory to the 'Host' log channel.
There's more to be done here, both for Mac and for other platforms,
but the initial set of new loggings are useful enough to check in
at this point.
llvm-svn: 243200
Summary:
This replaces (void)x; usages where they x was subsequently
involved in an assertion with this macro to make the
intent more clear.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11451
llvm-svn: 243074
Changed the "jthreads" key/value in the stop reply packets to be "jstopinfo". This JSON only contains threads with valid stop reasons and allows us not to have to ask about other threads via qThreadStopInfo when we are stepping. The "jstopinfo" only gets sent if there are more than one thread since the stop reply packet contains all the info needed for a single thread.
Added a Process::WillPublicStop() in case process subclasses want to do any extra gathering for public stops. For ProcessGDBRemote, we end up sending a jThreadsInfo packet to gather all expedited registers, expedited memory and MacOSX queue information. We only do this for public stops to minimize the packets we send when we have multiple private stops. Multiple private stops happen when a source level single step, step into or step out run the process multiple times while implementing the stepping, and none of these private stops make it out to the UI via notifications because they are private stops.
llvm-svn: 242593
For Hexagon we want to be able to call functions during debugging, however currently lldb only supports this when there is JIT support.
Although emulation using IR interpretation is an alternative, it is currently limited in that it can't make function calls.
In this patch we have extended the IR interpreter so that it can execute a function call on the target using register manipulation.
To do this we need to handle the Call IR instruction, passing arguments to a new thread plan and collecting any return values to pass back into the IR interpreter.
The new thread plan is needed to call an alternative ABI interface of "ABI::PerpareTrivialCall()", allowing more detailed information about arguments and return values.
Reviewers: jingham, spyffe
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits, ted, ADodds, deepak2427
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9404
llvm-svn: 242137
Summary:
- Consolidate Unix signals selection in UnixSignals.
- Make Unix signals available from platform.
- Add jSignalsInfo packet to retrieve Unix signals from remote platform.
- Get a copy of the platform signal for each remote process.
- Update SB API for signals.
- Update signal utility in test suite.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: chaoren, jingham, labath, emaste, tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11094
llvm-svn: 242101
A few extras were fixed
- Symbol::GetAddress() now returns an Address object, not a reference. There were places where people were accessing the address of a symbol when the symbol's value wasn't an address symbol. On MacOSX, undefined symbols have a value zero and some places where using the symbol's address and getting an absolute address of zero (since an Address object with no section and an m_offset whose value isn't LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS is considered an absolute address). So fixing this required some changes to make sure people were getting what they expected.
- Since some places want to access the address as a reference, I added a few new functions to symbol:
Address &Symbol::GetAddressRef();
const Address &Symbol::GetAddressRef() const;
Linux test suite passes just fine now.
<rdar://problem/21494354>
llvm-svn: 240702
a hand-called function from the private state thread. The problem
was that on the way out of the private state thread, we try to drop
the run lock. That is appropriate for the main private state thread,
but not the secondary private state thread. Only the thread that
spawned them can know whether this is an appropriate thing to do or
not.
<rdar://problem/21375352>
llvm-svn: 240461
The problem was the mutex was only protecting the setting of m_exit_string and m_exit_string, but this function relies on the m_private_state being set to eStateExited in order to prevent more than 1 client setting the exit status. We want to only allow the first caller to succeed.
On MacOSX we have a thread that reaps the process we are debugging, and we also have a thread that monitors the debugserver process. When a process exists, the ProcessGDBRemote::AsyncThread() would set the exit status to the correct value and then another thread would reap the debugserver process and they would often both end up in Process::SetExitStatus() at the same time. With the mutex at the top we allow all variables to be set and the m_private_state to be set to eStateExited _before_ the other thread (debugserver reaped) can try to set th exist status to -1 and "lost connection to debugserver" being set as the exit status.
This was probably an issue for lldb-server as well and could very well cleanup some tests that might have been expecting a specific exit status from the process being debugged.
llvm-svn: 238794
Summary:
This should solve the issue of sending denormalized paths over gdb-remote
if we stick to GetPath(false) in GDBRemoteCommunicationClient, and let the
server handle any denormalization.
Reviewers: ovyalov, zturner, vharron, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9728
llvm-svn: 238604