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
Summary:
This removes the last usage of Platform plugins in lldb-server -- it was used for launching child
processes, where it can be trivially replaced by Host::LaunchProces (as lldb-server is always
running on the host).
Removing platform plugins enables us to remove a lot of other unused code, which was pulled in as
a transitive dependency, and it reduces lldb-server size by 4%--9% (depending on build type and
architecture).
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20440
llvm-svn: 274125
for TestNamespaceLookup.py; didn't see anything obviously wrong so I'll
need to look at this more closely before re-committing. (passed OK on
macOS ;)
llvm-svn: 273531
There's uses of "macosx" that will be more tricky to
change, like in triples (e.g. "x86_64-apple-macosx10.11") -
for now I'm just updating source comments and strings printed
for humans.
llvm-svn: 273524
This patch allows LLDB for AArch64 to watch all bytes, words or double words individually on non 8-byte alligned addresses.
This patch also adds tests to verify this functionality.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21280
llvm-svn: 272916
Summary:
Because PIE executables have an e_type of llvm::ELF::ET_DYN,
they are not of type eTypeExecutable, and were being removed
when svr4 packets were used.
Reviewers: clayborg, ADodds, tfiala, sas
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20990
llvm-svn: 271899
This change implements dumping the executable, triple,
args and environment when using ProcessInfo::Dump().
It also tweaks the way Args::Dump() works so that it prints
a configurable label rather than argv[{index}]={value}. By
default it behaves the same, but if the Dump() method with
the additional arg is provided, it can be overridden. The
environment variables dumped as part of ProcessInfo::Dump()
make use of that.
lldb-server has been modified to dump the gdb-remote stub's
ProcessInfo before launching if the "gdb-remote process" channel
is logged.
llvm-svn: 271312
r259714 introduces the transport method into the
URL passed to the gdb-remote stub. On debugserver,
this is not supported and prevented debugserver from
being launched by lldb-server in platform mode.
This change skips the transport method addition from
r259714 when on Apple hosts.
llvm-svn: 270961
The error was not getting propagated to the caller, so the higher layers thought the breakpoint
was successfully set & resolved.
I added a testcase, but it assumes 0x0 is not a valid place to set a breakpoint. On most systems
that is true, but if it isn't true of your system, either find another good place and add it to the
test, or x-fail the test.
<rdar://problem/26345962>
llvm-svn: 270014
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
Summary:
MonitorDebugServerProcess went to a lot of effort to make sure its asynchronous invocation does
not cause any mischief, but it was still not race-free. Specifically, in a quick stop-restart
sequence (like the one in TestAddressBreakpoints) the copying of the process shared pointer via
target_sp->GetProcessSP() was racing with the resetting of the pointer in DeleteCurrentProcess,
as they were both accessing the same shared_ptr object.
To avoid this, I simply pass in a weak_ptr to the process when the callback is created. Locking
this pointer is race-free as they are two separate object even though they point to the same
process instance. This also removes the need for the complicated tap-dance around retrieving the
process pointer.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20107
llvm-svn: 269281
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
Summary:
If the remote uses svr4 packets to communicate library info,
the LoadUnload tests will fail, as lldb only used the basename
for modules, causing problems when two modules have the same basename.
Using absolute path as sent by the remote will ensure that lldb
locates the module from the correct directory when there are overlapping
basenames. When debugging a remote process, LoadModuleAtAddress will still
fall back to using basename and module_search_paths, so we don't
need to worry about using absolute paths in this case.
Reviewers: ADodds, jasonmolenda, clayborg, ovyalov
Subscribers: lldb-commits, sas
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19557
llvm-svn: 267741
Summary:
If the remote uses include features when communicating
xml register info back to lldb, the existing code would reset the
lldb register index at the beginning of each include node.
This would lead to multiple registers having the same lldb register index.
Since the lldb register numbers should be contiguous and unique,
maintain them accross the parsing of all of the xml feature nodes.
Reviewers: jingham, jasonmolenda, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, sas
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19303
llvm-svn: 267468
Summary:
When we receive an svr4 packet from the remote, we check for new modules
and add them to the list of images in the target. However, we did not
do the same for modules which have been removed.
This was causing TestLoadUnload to fail when using ds2, which uses
svr4 packets to communicate all library info on Linux. This patch fixes
the failing test.
Reviewers: zturner, tfiala, ADodds
Subscribers: lldb-commits, sas
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19230
llvm-svn: 267467
Summary:
eRegisterKindProcessPlugin is used to store the register
indices used by the remote, and eRegisterKindLLDB is used
to store the internal lldb register indices. However, we're currently
using the lldb indices instead of the process plugin indices
when sending p/P packets. This will break if the remote uses
non-contiguous register indices.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, sas
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19305
llvm-svn: 267466
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
In turns out this does make a functional change, in case when the inferior hits an int3 that was
not placed by the debugger. Backing out for now.
llvm-svn: 265647
Summary:
SetThreadStopInfo was checking for a breakpoint at the current PC several times. This merges the
identical code into a separate function. I've left one breakpoint check alone, as it was doing
more complicated stuff, and it did not see a way to merge that without making the interface
complicated. NFC.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18819
llvm-svn: 265560
Summary:
This resolves a similar problem as D16720 (which handled the case when we single-step onto a
breakpoint), but this one deals with involutary stops: when we stop a thread (e.g. because
another thread has hit a breakpont and we are doing a full stop), we can end up stopping it right
before it executes a breakpoint instruction. In this case, the stop reason will be empty, but we
will still step over the breakpoint when do the next resume, thereby missing a breakpoint hit.
I have observed this happening in TestConcurrentEvents, but I have no idea how to reproduce this
behavior more reliably.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18692
llvm-svn: 265525
Summary:
The logic to read modules from memory was added to LoadModuleAtAddress
in the dynamic loader, but not in process gdb remote. This means that when
the remote uses svr4 packets to give library info, libraries only present
on the remote will not be loaded.
This patch therefore involves some code duplication from LoadModuleAtAddress
in the dynamic loader, but removing this would require some amount of code
refactoring.
Reviewers: ADodds, tberghammer, tfiala, deepak2427, ted
Subscribers: tfiala, lldb-commits, sas
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18531
Change by Francis Ricci <fjricci@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 265418
rnb_err_t
RNBRemote::HandlePacket_stop_process (const char *p)
{
if (!DNBProcessInterrupt(m_ctx.ProcessID()))
HandlePacket_last_signal (NULL);
return rnb_success;
}
In the call to DNBProcessInterrupt we did:
nub_bool_t
DNBProcessInterrupt(nub_process_t pid)
{
MachProcessSP procSP;
if (GetProcessSP (pid, procSP))
return procSP->Interrupt();
return false;
}
This would always return false. It would cause HandlePacket_stop_process to always call "HandlePacket_last_signal (NULL);" which would send an extra stop reply packet _if_ the process is stopped. On a machine with enough cores, it would call DNBProcessInterrupt(...) and then HandlePacket_last_signal(NULL) so quickly that it will never send out an extra stop reply packet. But if the machine is slow enough or doesn't have enough cores, it could cause the call to HandlePacket_last_signal() to actually succeed and send an extra stop reply packet. This would cause problems up in GDBRemoteCommunicationClient::SendContinuePacketAndWaitForResponse() where it would get the first stop reply packet and then possibly return or execute an async packet. If it returned, then the next packet that was sent will get the second stop reply as its response. If it executes an async packet, the async packet will get the wrong response.
To fix this I did the following:
1 - in debugserver, I fixed "bool MachProcess::Interrupt()" to return true if it sends the signal so we avoid sending the stop reply twice on slower machines
2 - Added a log line to RNBRemote::HandlePacket_stop_process() to say if we ever send an extra stop reply so we will see this in the darwin console output if this does happen
3 - Added response validators to StringExtractorGDBRemote so that we can verify some responses to some packets.
4 - Added validators to packets that often follow stop reply packets like the "m" packet for memory reads, JSON packets since "jThreadsInfo" is often sent immediately following a stop reply.
5 - Modified GDBRemoteCommunicationClient::SendPacketAndWaitForResponseNoLock() to validate responses. Any "StringExtractorGDBRemote &response" that contains a valid response verifier will verify the response and keep looking for correct responses up to 3 times. This will help us get back on track if we do get extra stop replies. If a StringExtractorGDBRemote does not have a response validator, it will accept any packet in response.
6 - In GDBRemoteCommunicationClient::SendPacketAndWaitForResponse we copy the response validator from the "response" argument over into m_async_response so that if we send the packet by interrupting the running process, we can validate the response we actually get in GDBRemoteCommunicationClient::SendContinuePacketAndWaitForResponse()
7 - Modified GDBRemoteCommunicationClient::SendContinuePacketAndWaitForResponse() to always check for an extra stop reply packet for 100ms when the process is interrupted. We were already doing this because we might interrupt a process with a \x03 packet, yet the process was in the process of stopping due to another reason. This race condition could cause an extra stop reply packet because the GDB remote protocol says if a \x03 packet is sent while the process is stopped, we should send a stop reply packet back. Now we always check for an extra stop reply packet when we manually interrupt a process.
The issue was showing up when our IDE would attempt to set a breakpoint while the process is running and this would happen:
--> \x03
<-- $T<stop reply 1>
--> z0,AAAAA,BB (set breakpoint)
<-- $T<stop reply 1> (incorrect extra stop reply packet)
--> c
<-- OK (response from z0 packet)
Now all packet traffic was off by one response. Since we now have a validator on the response for "z" packets, we do this:
--> \x03
<-- $T<stop reply 1>
--> z0,AAAAA,BB (set breakpoint)
<-- $T<stop reply 1> (Ignore this because this can't be the response to z0 packets)
<-- OK -- (we are back on track as this is a valid response to z0)
...
As time goes on we should add more packet validators.
<rdar://problem/22859505>
llvm-svn: 265086
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
on attach uses the architecture it has figured out, rather than the Target's
architecture, which may not have been updated to the correct value yet.
<rdar://problem/24632895>
llvm-svn: 261279
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
Summary:
r259344 introduced a bug, where we fail to perform a single step, when the instruction we are
stepping onto contains a breakpoint which is not valid for this thread. This fixes the problem
and add a test case.
Reviewers: tberghammer, emaste
Subscribers: abhishek.aggarwal, lldb-commits, emaste
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16767
llvm-svn: 259488
Summary:
- The patch solves Bug 23478 and Bug 19311. Resolving
Bug 23478 also resolves Bug 23039.
Correct ThreadStopInfo is set for Linux and FreeBSD
platforms.
- Summary:
When a trace event is reported, we need to check
whether the trace event lands at a breakpoint site.
If it lands at a breakpoint site then set the thread's
StopInfo with the reason 'breakpoint'. Else, set the reason
to be 'Trace'.
Change-Id: I0af9765e782fd74bc0cead41548486009f8abb87
Signed-off-by: Abhishek Aggarwal <abhishek.a.aggarwal@intel.com>
Reviewers: jingham, emaste, lldb-commits, clayborg, ovyalov
Subscribers: emaste
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16720
llvm-svn: 259344
This is a packet which allows the remote gdb stub to ask for the address
of a symbol in the process. lldb sends the packet (offering to provide
addresses for symbol names) after every solib loaded. I changed lldb so
that once the stub has indicated that it doesn't need any more symbol
addresses, lldb will stop sending the qSymbol:: packet on new solib loads.
This can yield a performance benefit over slower communication links when
there are many solibs involved.
<rdar://problem/23310049>
llvm-svn: 257569
Summary:
Allows the remote to enumerate the link map when adding and removing
shared libraries, so that lldb doesn't need to read it manually from
the remote's memory.
This provides very large speedups (on the order of 50%) in total
startup time when using the ds2 remote on android or Tizen devices.
Reviewers: ADodds, tberghammer, tfiala
Subscribers: tberghammer, sas, danalbert, llvm-commits, srhines
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16004
Change by Francis Ricci <fjricci@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 257502
at each public stop to improve performance a bit. Most of the
information lldb needed was already in the jThreadsInfo response;
complete that information and catch a few cases where we could still
fall back to getting the information via discrete memory reads.
debugserver adds 'associated_with_dispatch_queue' and 'dispatch_queue_t
keys to the jThreadsInfo response for all the threads. lldb needs the
dispatch_queue_t value. And associated_with_dispatch_queue helps to
identify which threads definitively don't have any queue information so
lldb doesn't try to do memory reads to get that information just because
it was absent in the jThreadsInfo response.
Remove the queue information from the questionmark (T) packet. We'll
get the information for all threads via the jThreadsInfo response -
sending the information for the stopping thread (on all the private
stops, plus the less frequent public stop) was unnecessary information
being sent over the wire.
SystemRuntimeMacOSX will try to get information about queues by asking
the Threads for them, instead of reading memory.
ProcessGDBRemote changes to recognize the new keys being sent in the
jThreadsInfo response. Changes to ThreadGDBRemote to track the new
information. Also, when a thread is marked as definitively not
associated with a libdispatch queue, don't fall back to the system
runtime to try memory reads to find the queue name / kind / ID etc.
<rdar://problem/23309359>
llvm-svn: 257453
"qserial" to "qserialnum" because "qserial" looks a lot like the
queue type (either 'serial' or 'concurrent') and can be confusing
to read through. debugserver passes these up either in the questionmark
("T") packet, or in the response to the jThreadsInfo packet.
llvm-svn: 257121
Summary:
Some debug servers don't support it so there's no point in spamming
this.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: fjricci, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15972
llvm-svn: 257116
(There are changes in the copies of these four files in the FreeBSD base
system, and I've changed these ones to reduce gratuitous diffs in future
imports.)
llvm-svn: 256723
"thread-pcs" key is added to the T (questionmark) packet in
gdb-remote protocol so that lldb doesn't need to query the
pc values of every thread before it resumes a process.
The only odd part with this is that I'm sending the pc
values in big endian order, so we need to know the endianness
of the remote process before we can use them. All other
register values in gdb-remote protocol are sent in native-endian
format so this requirement doesn't exist. This addition is a
performance enhancement -- lldb will fall back to querying the
pc of each thread individually if it needs to -- so when
we don't have the byte order for the process yet, we don't
use these values. Practically speaking, the only way I've
been able to elicit this condition is for the first
T packet when we attach to a process.
<rdar://problem/21963031>
llvm-svn: 255942
The standard remote debugging workflow with gdb is to start the
application on the remote host under gdbserver (e.g.: gdbserver :5039
a.out) and then connect to it with gdb.
The same workflow is supported by debugserver/lldb-gdbserver with a very
similar syntax but to access all features of lldb we need to be
connected also to an lldb-platform instance running on the target.
Before this change this had to be done manually with starting a separate
lldb-platform on the target machine and then connecting to it with lldb
before connecting to the process.
This change modifies the behavior of "platform connect" with
automatically connecting to the process instance if it was started by
the remote platform. With this command replacing gdbserver in a gdb
based worflow is usually as simple as replacing the command to execute
gdbserver with executing lldb-platform.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14952
llvm-svn: 255016
* Add support for representing signed integers
* Add new constructors taking any signed or unsigned integer types
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15187
llvm-svn: 254715
Summary:
This makes sure we do not attempt to send output over the gdb-remote protocol when the client is
not expecting it (i.e., after sending the stop-reply packet). Normally, this should not happen
(the process cannot generate output when it is stopped), but due to the fact that pty
communication is asynchronous in the linux kernel (llvm.org/pr25652), we may sometimes get this
output too late. Instead, we just hold the output, and send it next time we resume. This is not
ideal, but at least it makes sure we do not violate the remote protocol. Given that this happens
extremely rarely it's not worth trying to work around it with sleeps or something like that.
I also remove the m_stdio_communication_mutex, as all of LLGS is now single-threaded anyway.
Reviewers: tberghammer, ovyalov
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15019
llvm-svn: 254200
They get treated as special RLE encoding symbols and packets get
corrupted. Most other packet types already know about this apparently,
but QEnvironment missed these two.
Should fix PR25300.
llvm-svn: 252521
Summary:
Since this is within the lldb namespace, the compiler tries to
export a symbol for it. Unfortunately, since it is inlined, the
symbol is hidden and this results in a mess of warnings when
building on OS X with cmake.
Moving it to the lldb_private namespace eliminates that problem.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14417
llvm-svn: 252396
Summary:
Gdb-remote's async thread sent out the eBroadcastBitRunPacketSent message *before* actually
sending out the continue packet. Since it's this message the actually triggers the public state
transition, it could happen (and it did happen in TestAttachResume, which does an "process
interrupt" right after a continue) that we attempt to stop the inferior before it was actually
started (which obviously did not end well). This fixes the problem by moving the broadcast after
the packet was actually sent.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14083
llvm-svn: 251399
This avoids the need to query the PC for private resume operations (public resumes have the PC
from the bigger jStopInfo packet) and speeds up the stepping on an android target by about 10%
(it some cases even more).
llvm-svn: 251301
This allows open source MacOSX clients to not have to build debugserver and the current LLDB can find debugserver inside the selected Xcode.app on your system.
<rdar://problem/23167253>
llvm-svn: 250735
There were a number of const qualifiers being cast away which caused warnings.
This cluttered the output hiding real errors. Silence them by explicit casting.
NFC.
llvm-svn: 250662
disabled the use of the jThreadGetExtendedInfo packet which is used
to retrieve additional information about a thread, such as the QoS
setting for that thread on darwin systems.
Re-enable the use of the jThreadGetExtendedInfo packet, and add
some quick tests to the TestQueues mac test case which will verify
that we can retrieve the QoS names for these test threads.
<rdar://problem/22925096>
llvm-svn: 250364
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
Summary:
This commit adds support for binary memory reads ($x) to lldb-server. It also removes the "0x"
prefix from the $x client packet, to make it more compatible with the old $m packet. This allows
us to use almost the same code for handling both packet types. I have verified that debugserver
correctly handles $x packets even without the leading "0x". I have added a test which verifies
that the stub returns the same memory contents for both kinds of memory reads ($x and $m).
Reviewers: tberghammer, jasonmolenda
Subscribers: iancottrell, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13695
llvm-svn: 250295
on iOS devices; fallout from Vince's cleanups made
in r237218 back in May. iOS native lldbs will call
StartDebugserverProcess() with a random port #
(see ProcessGDBRemote::LaunchAndConnectToDebugserver)
and neither side of this conditional expression should
be followed in that case.
I added an "if (in_port == 0) { ..." check around the
entire if/then/else and indented the block of code so
the diff looks larger than it really is.
<rdar://problem/21712643>
llvm-svn: 248343
Character with ASCII code 0 is incorrectly treated by LLDB as the end of
RSP packet. The left of the debugger server output is silently ignored.
Patch from evgeny.leviant@gmail.com
Reviewed by: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12523
llvm-svn: 247908
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
SUMMARY:
Refer to http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2015-August/008024.html for discussion
on this topic. Bare-iron target like YAMON gdb-stub does not support qProcessInfo, qC,
qfThreadInfo, Hg and Hc packets. Reply from ? packet is as simple as S05. There is no
packet which gives us process or threads information. In such cases, assume pid=tid=1.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: nitesh.jain, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan and lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12876
llvm-svn: 247773
"gcc" register numbers are now correctly referred to as "ehframe"
register numbers. In almost all cases, ehframe and dwarf register
numbers are identical (the one exception is i386 darwin where ehframe
regnums were incorrect).
The old "gdb" register numbers, which I incorrectly thought were
stabs register numbers, are now referred to as "Process Plugin"
register numbers. This is the register numbering scheme that the
remote process controller stub (lldb-server, gdbserver, core file
support, kdp server, remote jtag devices, etc) uses to refer to the
registers. The process plugin register numbers may not be contiguous
- there are remote jtag devices that have gaps in their register
numbering schemes.
I removed all of the enums for "gdb" register numbers that we had
in lldb - these were meaningless - and I put LLDB_INVALID_REGNUM
in all of the register tables for the Process Plugin regnum slot.
This change is almost entirely mechnical; the one actual change in
here is to ProcessGDBRemote.cpp's ParseRegisters() which parses the
qXfer:features:read:target.xml response. As it parses register
definitions from the xml, it will assign sequential numbers as the
eRegisterKindLLDB numbers (the lldb register numberings must be
sequential, without any gaps) and if the xml file specifies register
numbers, those will be used as the eRegisterKindProcessPlugin
register numbers (and those may have gaps). A J-Link jtag device's
target.xml does contain a gap in register numbers, and it only
specifies the register numbers for the registers after that gap.
The device supports many different ARM boards and probably selects
different part of its register file as appropriate.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D12791
<rdar://problem/22623262>
llvm-svn: 247741
qXfer:features:read:target.xml packet, or via the
plugin.process.gdb-remote.target-definition-file setting, if the
register definition doesn't give us eh_frame or DWARF register
numbers for that register, try to get that information from the ABI
plugin.
The DWARF/eh_frame register numbers are defined in the ABI
standardization documents - so getting this from the ABI plugin is
reasonable. There's little value in having the remote stub inform
us of this generic information, as long as we can all agree on the
names of the registers.
There's some additional information we could get from the ABI. For
instance, on ABIs where function arguments are passed in registers,
lldb defines alternate names like "arg1", "arg2", "arg3" for these
registers so they can be referred to that way by the user. We could
get this from the ABI if the remote stub doesn't provide that. That
may be something worth doing in the future - but for now, I'm keeping
this a little more minimal.
Thinking about this, what we want/need from the remote stub at a
minimum are:
1. The names of the register
2. The number that the stub will use to refer to the register with
the p/P packets and in the ? response packets (T/S) where
expedited register values are provided
3. The size of the register in bytes
(nice to have, to remove any doubt)
4. The offset of the register in the g/G packet if we're going to
use that for reading/writing registers.
debugserver traditionally provides a lot more information in
addition to this via the qRegisterInfo packet, and debugserver
augments its response to the qXfer:features:read:target.xml
query to include this information. Including:
DWARF regnum, eh_frame regnum, stabs regnum, encoding (ieee754,
Uint, Vector, Sint), format (hex, unsigned, pointer, vectorof*,
float), registers that should be marked as invalid if this
register is modified, and registers that contain this register.
We might want to get all of this from the ABI - I'm not convinced
that it makes sense for the remote stub to provide any of these
details, as long as the ABI and remote stub can agree on register
names.
Anyway, start with eh_frame and DWARF coming from the ABI if
they're not provided by the remote stub. We can look at doing
more in the future.
<rdar://problem/22566585>
llvm-svn: 247121
When lldb receives a gdb-remote protocol packet that has
nonprintable characters, it will print the packet in
gdb-remote logging with binary-hex encoding so we don't
dump random 8-bit characters into the packet log.
I'm changing this check to allow whitespace characters
(newlines, linefeeds, tabs) to be printed if those are
the only non-printable characters in the packet.
This is primarily to get the response to the
qXfer:features:read:target.xml packet to show up in the
packet logs in human readable form. Right now we just
get a dozen kilobytes of hex-ascii and it's hard to
figure out what register number scheme is being used.
llvm-svn: 247120
Summary:
There was a race condition in the AsyncThread, where we would end up sending a vAttach
notification to the thread before it got a chance set up its listener (this can be reproduced by
adding a sleep() at the very beginning of ProcessGDBRemote::AsyncThread()). This event would then
get lost and we LLDB would deadlock. I fix this by setting up the listener early on, in the
ProcessGDBRemote constructor.
This should improve the stability of all attach tests. For now, I am removing XTIMEOUT from
TestAttachResume, and will watch the buildbots for signs of trouble.
Reviewers: clayborg, ovyalov
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12552
llvm-svn: 246756
Summary:
This doesn't exist in other LLVM projects any longer and doesn't
do anything.
Reviewers: chaoren, labath
Subscribers: emaste, tberghammer, lldb-commits, danalbert
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12586
llvm-svn: 246749
code that looks for a second stop-reply packet in response to an
interrupt (control-c). This is to handle the case where where a
stop packet is making its way up to lldb right as lldb decides to
interrupt the inferior. If the inferior is running and we interrupt
it, we'd expect a T11 type response meaning that the inferior halted
because of the interrupt. But if the interrupt gets a T05 type
response instead, meaning that we stopped execution by hitting a
breakpoint or whatever, then the interrupt was received while the
inferior was already paused and so it is treated as a "?" packet
-- the remote stub will send the stop message a second time.
There's a timeout where we wait to get this second stop reply packet
in SendContinuePacketAndWaitForResponse, currently 1ms. For a slow
remote target, it may take longer than that to send the second stop
reply packet. If that happens, then lldb will use that second stop
reply packet as the response for the next packet request it makes
to the remote stub. The two will be out of sync by one packet for
the rest of the debug session and it's going to go badly from then on.
I've seen times as slow as 46ms, and given the severity of missing that
second stop reply packet, I'm increasing the timeout to 100ms, or 0.1sec.
<rdar://problem/21990791>
llvm-svn: 246004
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9703
This updated patches correct problems in arm hardware watchpoint support patch posted earlier.
This patch has been tested on samsung chromebook (ARM - Linux) and PandaBoard using basic watchpoint test application.
Also it was tested on Nexus 7 Android device.
On chromebook linux we are able to set and clear all types of watchpoints but on android we end up getting a watchpoint packet error because we are not able to call hardware watchpoint ptrace functions successfully.
llvm-svn: 245961
Summary:
When a windows remote stops because of a DLL load/unload, the debug server
sends a stop reply packet that contains a `library` key with any value (usually
just `library:1`). This indicates to the debugger that a library has been
loaded or unloaded and that the list of libraries should be refreshed (usually
with `qXfer:libraries:read`).
This change just triggers a call to `LoadModules()` which in turns will send a
remote library read command when a stop reply that requests it is received.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner, tberghammer
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12218
llvm-svn: 245708
This was breaking disassembly for arm machines that we force to be
thumb mode all the time because we were only checking for llvm::Triple::arm.
i.e.
armv6m (ARM Cortex-M0)
armv7m (ARM Cortex-M3)
armv7em (ARM Cortex-M4)
<rdar://problem/22334522>
llvm-svn: 245645
Summary:
This is useful when dealing with Windows remote that use only the
qXfer:libraries command which returns absolute base addresses, as
opposed to qXfer:libraries-svr4 which returns relative offsets for
module bases.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner, ADodds
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12204
llvm-svn: 245625
Summary: Size specifier should come after `%` not before.
Reviewers: clayborg, ADodds
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12203
llvm-svn: 245608
to the user. e.g. specified via the
plugin.process.gdb-remote.target-definition-file
setting. Currently we silently ignore the target definition if
there is a parse error.
llvm-svn: 245536
for eh_frame and stabs register numberings. This is not
complete but it's a step in the right direction. It's almost
entirely mechanical.
lldb informally uses "gcc register numbering" to mean eh_frame.
Why? Probably because there's a notorious bug with gcc on i386
darwin where the register numbers in eh_frame were incorrect.
In all other cases, eh_frame register numbering is identical to
dwarf.
lldb informally uses "gdb register numbering" to mean stabs.
There are no official definitions of stabs register numbers
for different architectures, so the implementations of gdb
and gcc are the de facto reference source.
There were some incorrect uses of these register number types
in lldb already. I fixed the ones that I saw as I made
this change.
This commit changes all references to "gcc" and "gdb" register
numbers in lldb to "eh_frame" and "stabs" to make it clear
what is actually being represented.
lldb cannot parse the stabs debug format, and given that no
one is using stabs any more, it is unlikely that it ever will.
A more comprehensive cleanup would remove the stabs register
numbers altogether - it's unnecessary cruft / complication to
all of our register structures.
In ProcessGDBRemote, when we get register definitions from
the gdb-remote stub, we expect to see "gcc:" (qRegisterInfo)
or "gcc_regnum" (qXfer:features:read: packet to get xml payload).
This patch changes ProcessGDBRemote to also accept "ehframe:"
and "ehframe_regnum" from these remotes.
I did not change GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS or debugserver
to send these new packets. I don't know what kind of interoperability
constraints we might be working under. At some point in the future
we should transition to using the more descriptive names.
Throughout lldb we're still using enum names like "gcc_r0" and "gdb_r0",
for eh_frame and stabs register numberings. These should be cleaned
up eventually too.
The sources link cleanly on macosx native with xcode build. I
don't think we'll see problems on other platforms but please let
me know if I broke anyone.
llvm-svn: 245141
SUMMARY:
The patch uses qfThreadID to get the thread IDs if qC packet is not supported by target.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: nitesh.jain, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan and lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11519
llvm-svn: 244866
SUMMARY:
The patch supports TAAwatch:addr packet. The patch also sets m_watchpoints_trigger_after_instruction
to eLazyBoolNo when qHostInfo or qWatchpointSupportInfo is not supported by the target.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: nitesh.jain, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan and lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11747
llvm-svn: 244865
SUMMARY:
Last 3bits of the watchpoint address are masked by the kernel. For example, n is
at 0x120010d00 and m is 0x120010d04. When a watchpoint is set at m, then watch
exception is generated even when n is read/written. To handle this case, instruction
at PC is emulated to find the base address of the load/store instruction. This address
is then appended to the description of the stop-info packet. Client then reads this
information to check whether the user has set a watchpoint on this address.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: nitesh.jain, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan and lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11672
llvm-svn: 244864
The issue was we were sending a "qSymbol::" packet and it we were already disconnected were weren't exiting the while loop if we didn't successfully send the qSymbol packet.
<rdar://problem/22098746>
llvm-svn: 244683
working with (the Communication m_bytes ivar) contained a single packet.
Instead, it may contain multitudes. Find the boundaries of the first packet
in the buffer and replace that with the decompressed version leaving the
rest of the buffer unmodified.
<rdar://problem/21841377>
llvm-svn: 243846
Previously embedded interpreters were handled as ad-hoc source
files compiled into source/Interpreter. This made it hard to
disable a specific interpreter, or to add support for other
interpreters and allow the developer to choose which interpreter(s)
were enabled for a particular build.
This patch converts script interpreters over to a plugin-based system.
Script interpreters now live in source/Plugins/ScriptInterpreter, and
the canonical LLDB interpreter, ScriptInterpreterPython, is moved there
as well.
Any new code interfacing with the Python C API must live in this location
from here on out. Additionally, generic code should never need to
reference or make assumptions about the presence of a specific interpreter
going forward.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11431
Reviewed By: Greg Clayton
llvm-svn: 243681