Commit Graph

15 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Raphael Isemann 5b354d204d [lldb] Make symbol list output from `image dump symtab` not depend on internal ordering of DenseMap
`image dump symtab` seems to output the symbols in whatever order they appear in
the DenseMap that is used to filter out symbols with non-unique addresses. As
DenseMap is a hash map this order can change at any time so the output of this
command is pretty unstable. This also causes the `Breakpad/symtab.test` to fail
with enabled reverse iteration (which reverses the DenseMap order to find issues
like this).

This patch makes the DenseMap a std::vector and uses a separate DenseSet to do
the address filtering. The output order is now dependent on the order in which
the symbols are read (which should be deterministic). It might also avoid a bit
of work as all the work for creating the Symbol constructor parameters is only
done when we can actually emplace a new Symbol.

Reviewed By: labath

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87036
2020-09-03 10:27:19 +02:00
Jason Molenda 99d187a003 Update UnwindPlan dump to list if it is a trap handler func; also Command
Update the "image show-unwind" command output to show if the function
being shown is listed as a user-setting or platform trap handler.

Update the individual UnwindPlan dumps to show whether the unwind plan
is registered as a trap handler.
2020-08-25 20:53:59 -07:00
Fangrui Song b587ca93be [test] Replace `yaml2obj >` with `yaml2obj -o` and remove unneeded input redirection 2020-08-20 15:01:09 -07:00
Pavel Labath ba03bcbc4a [lldb] Remove custom DWARF expression printing code
The llvm DWARFExpression dump is nearly identical, but better -- for
example it does print a spurious space after zero-argument expressions.

Some parts of our code (variable locations) have been already switched
to llvm-based expression dumping. This switches the remainder: unwind
plans and some unit tests.
2020-05-25 16:09:25 +02:00
Pavel Labath e22f0dabcf [lldb/breakpad] Fix register resolution on arm
In breakpad, only x86 (and mips) registers have a leading '$' in their
names. Arm architectures use plain register names.

Previously, lldb was assuming all registers have a '$'. Fix the code to
match the (unfortunately, inconsistent) reality.
2020-03-26 13:51:27 +01:00
Pavel Labath c72675394a [lldb] add lit.local.cfg for breakpad tests
The reason is to add .yaml as a valid test suffix. The test folder
contains one yaml file, which wasn't being run because of that.

Unsurprisingly the test fails, but this was not because the underlying
functionality was broken, but rather because the test was setup
incorrectly (most likely due to overly aggressive simplification of the
test data on my part).

Therefore this patch also tweaks the test inputs in order to test what
they are supposed to test, and also updates some other breakpad tests
(because they depend on the same inputs as this one) to be more
realistic -- specifically it avoids putting symbols to the first page of
the module, as that's where normally the COFF header would reside.
2020-03-25 17:00:46 +01:00
Pavel Labath be3b448c2e [lldb/test] simplify basic-elf.yaml
Explicit dynsym/dynstr sections were added in a6370d5 to compensate for
a yaml2obj change D74764. This test doesn't need those sections, so
instead I just delete the explicit section blocks, and also the
"DynamicSymbols" block, which triggers their implicit generation.
2020-02-24 09:02:18 +01:00
Georgii Rymar a6370d5798 [lldb][test] - Update basic-elf.yaml to fix build bot.
D74764 (https://reviews.llvm.org/rG31f2ad9c368d47721508cbd0d120d626f9041715)
changed the behavior of the yaml2obj. Now it assigns virtual addresses
for allocatable sections.

SymbolFile/Breakpad/symtab.test started to fail after this change:
(http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/lldb-x86_64-debian/builds/5520/steps/test/logs/stdio)

Command Output (stderr):
--
/home/worker/lldb-x86_64-debian/lldb-x86_64-debian/llvm-project/lldb/test/Shell/SymbolFile/Breakpad/symtab.test:6:10: error: CHECK: expected string not found in input
# CHECK: Symtab, file = {{.*}}symtab.out, num_symbols = 5:
         ^
<stdin>:15:1: note: scanning from here
Symtab, file = /home/worker/lldb-x86_64-debian/lldb-x86_64-debian/build/tools/lldb/test/SymbolFile/Breakpad/Output/symtab.out, num_symbols = 6:
^
<stdin>:15:99: note: possible intended match here
Symtab, file = /home/worker/lldb-x86_64-debian/lldb-x86_64-debian/build/tools/lldb/test/SymbolFile/Breakpad/Output/symtab.out, num_symbols = 6:

For now I've updated the basic-elf.yaml so that now it produce the same layout as before D74764.
Breakpad/symtab.test should be updated it seems.
2020-02-22 16:09:24 +03:00
Pavel Labath f71e35dc1f lldb/breakpad: add suppport for the "x86_64h" architecture 2019-11-05 11:41:20 +01:00
Pavel Labath 193a7bfb69 minidump: Create memory regions from the sections of loaded modules
Summary:
Not all minidumps contain information about memory permissions. However,
it is still important to know which regions of memory contain
potentially executable code. This is particularly important for
unwinding on win32, as the default unwind method there relies on
scanning the stack for things which "look like" code pointers.

This patch enables ProcessMinidump to reconstruct the likely permissions
of memory regions using the sections of loaded object files. It only
does this if we don't have a better source (memory info list stream, or
linux /proc/maps) for this information, and only if the information in
the object files does not conflict with the information in the minidump.

Theoretically that last bit could be improved, since the permissions
obtained from the MemoryList streams is also only a very rough guess,
but it did not seem worthwhile to complicate the implementation because
of that because there will generally be no overlap in practice as the
MemoryList will contain the stack contents and not any module data.

The patch adds a test checking that the module section permissions are
entered into the memory region list, and also a test which demonstrate
that now the unwinder is able to correctly find return addresses even in
minidumps without memory info list streams.

There's one TODO left in this patch, which is that the "memory region"
output does not give any indication about the "don't know" values of
memory region permissions (it just prints them as if they permission bit
was set). I address this in a follow up.

Reviewers: amccarth, clayborg

Subscribers: mgrang, lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69105
2019-10-31 11:24:55 +01:00
Pavel Labath ea8b8fdf90 Add REQUIRES: x86 to more tests which need the x86 llvm target built
llvm-svn: 375234
2019-10-18 13:49:40 +00:00
Pavel Labath 390accea83 unwind-via-stack-win.yaml: update for changes in yaml format
llvm-svn: 374353
2019-10-10 14:01:59 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere 87aa9c9e4d Re-land "[test] Split LLDB tests into API, Shell & Unit"
The original patch got reverted because it broke `check-lldb` on a clean
build. This fixes that.

llvm-svn: 374201
2019-10-09 19:22:02 +00:00
Adrian Prantl 0115c10328 Revert [test] Split LLDB tests into API, Shell & Unit
as it appears to have broken check-lldb.

This reverts r374184 (git commit 22314179f0)

llvm-svn: 374187
2019-10-09 17:35:43 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere 22314179f0 [test] Split LLDB tests into API, Shell & Unit
LLDB has three major testing strategies: unit tests, tests that exercise
the SB API though dotest.py and what we currently call lit tests. The
later is rather confusing as we're now using lit as the driver for all
three types of tests. As most of this grew organically, the directory
structure in the LLDB repository doesn't really make this clear.

The 'lit' tests are part of the root and among these tests there's a
Unit and Suite folder for the unit and dotest-tests. This layout makes
it impossible to run just the lit tests.

This patch changes the directory layout to match the 3 testing
strategies, each with their own directory and their own configuration
file. This means there are now 3 directories under lit with 3
corresponding targets:

 - API (check-lldb-api): Test exercising the SB API.
 - Shell (check-lldb-shell): Test exercising command line utilities.
 - Unit (check-lldb-unit): Unit tests.

Finally, there's still the `check-lldb` target that runs all three test
suites.

Finally, this also renames the lit folder to `test` to match the LLVM
repository layout.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68606

llvm-svn: 374184
2019-10-09 16:38:47 +00:00