This allows stepping operations that don't ever do a public stop to get all the info they need without having to send a jThreadsInfo packet since those tend to be large.
This patch will be followed by a patch that will detect when we do a public stop, and when that happens we will send a jThreadsInfo packet at that time to get all expedited registers and memory.
llvm-svn: 242352
This one I accidentally missed last time because I confused it with
the lldbUtility library. After this, all makefile libraries should
have the same names as their CMake counterparts.
llvm-svn: 242344
Summary:
This commit integrates MainLoop into NativeProcessLinux. By registering a SIGCHLD handler with
the llgs main loop, we can get rid of the special monitor thread in NPL, which saves as a lot of
thread ping-pong when responding to client requests (e.g. qThreadInfo processing time has been
reduced by about 40%). It also makes the code simpler, IMHO.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg, tberghammer, chaoren
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11150
llvm-svn: 242305
should send when detaching and leaving the remote process/system
halted. Previously only the 'D' initial char was sent, which
resumed the process like a normal detach.
llvm-svn: 242256
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
Summary:
This is the first part of our effort to make llgs single threaded. Currently, llgs consists of
about three threads and the synchronisation between them is a major source of latency when
debugging linux and android applications.
In order to be able to go single threaded, we must have the ability to listen for events from
multiple sources (primarily, client commands coming over the network and debug events from the
inferior) and perform necessary actions. For this reason I introduce the concept of a MainLoop.
A main loop has the ability to register callback's which will be invoked upon receipt of certain
events. MainLoopPosix has the ability to listen for file descriptors and signals.
For the moment, I have merely made the GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS class use MainLoop
instead of waiting on the network socket directly, but the other threads still remain. In the
followup patches I indend to migrate NativeProcessLinux to this class and remove the remaining
threads.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg, amccarth, zturner, emaste
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11066
llvm-svn: 242018
jGetLoadedDynamicLibrariesInfos. This packet is similar to
qXfer:libraries:read except that lldb supplies the number of solibs
that should be reported about, and the start address for the list
of them. At the initial process launch we'll read the full list
of solibs linked by the process -- at this point we could be using
qXfer:libraries:read -- but on subsequence solib-loaded notifications,
we'll be fetching a smaller number of solibs, often only one or two.
A typical Mac/iOS GUI app may have a couple hundred different
solibs loaded - doing all of the loads via memory reads takes
a couple of megabytes of traffic between lldb and debugserver.
Having debugserver summarize the load addresses of all the solibs
and sending it in JSON requires a couple of hundred kilobytes
of traffic. It's a significant performance improvement when
communicating over a slower channel.
This patch leaves all of the logic for loading the libraries
in DynamicLoaderMacOSXDYLD -- it only call over ot ProcesGDBRemote
to get the JSON result.
If the jGetLoadedDynamicLibrariesInfos packet is not implemented,
the normal technique of using memory read packets to get all of
the details from the target will be used.
<rdar://problem/21007465>
llvm-svn: 241964
Summary:
32-bit signed return value from ptrace got sign extended when being converted to
64-bit unsigned.
Also, replaced tabs with spaces in the source.
Reviewers: labath, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11047
llvm-svn: 241837
Summary:
This commit avoids the Platform instance when spawning or attaching to a process in lldb-server.
Instead, I have the server call a (static) method of NativeProcessProtocol directly. The reason
for this is that I believe that NativeProcessProtocol should be decoupled from the Platform
(after all, it always knows which platform it is running on, unlike the rest of lldb).
Additionally, the kind of platform actions a NativeProcessProtocol instance is likely to differ
greatly from the platform actions of the lldb client, so I think the separation makes sense.
After this, the only dependency NativeProcessLinux has on PlatformLinux is the ResolveExecutable
method, which needs additional refactoring.
This is a resubmit of r241672, after it was reverted due to build failueres on non-linux
platforms.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10996
llvm-svn: 241796
Summary:
This is used on non-unix platforms, where qXfer:libraries-svr4:read
doesn't make sense. Windows uses that for instance.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11036
llvm-svn: 241712
Summary:
This commit moves the Windows DyanamicLoader to the common DynamicLoader
directory. This is required to remote debug Windows targets.
This commit also initializes the Windows DYLD plugin in
SystemInitializerCommon (similarly to both POSIX and MacOSX DYLD
plugins) so that we can automatically instantiate this class when
connected to a windows process.
Test Plan: Build.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits, abdulras
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10882
llvm-svn: 241697
platform-specific symbols that are not implemented on OS X.
The build error that caused this is
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"lldb_private::NativeProcessProtocol::Attach(unsigned long long, lldb_private::NativeProcessProtocol::NativeDelegate&, std::__1::shared_ptr<lldb_private::NativeProcessProtocol>&)", referenced from:
lldb_private::process_gdb_remote::GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS::AttachToProcess(unsigned long long) in liblldb-core.a(GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS.o)
"lldb_private::NativeProcessProtocol::Launch(lldb_private::ProcessLaunchInfo&, lldb_private::NativeProcessProtocol::NativeDelegate&, std::__1::shared_ptr<lldb_private::NativeProcessProtocol>&)", referenced from:
lldb_private::process_gdb_remote::GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS::LaunchProcess() in liblldb-core.a(GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS.o)
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
llvm-svn: 241688
Summary:
This commit avoids the Platform instance when spawning or attaching to a process in lldb-server.
Instead, I have the server call a (static) method of NativeProcessProtocol directly. The reason
for this is that I believe that NativeProcessProtocol should be decoupled from the Platform
(after all, it always knows which platform it is running on, unlike the rest of lldb).
Additionally, the kind of platform actions a NativeProcessProtocol instance is likely to differ
greatly from the platform actions of the lldb client, so I think the separation makes sense.
After this, the only dependency NativeProcessLinux has on PlatformLinux is the ResolveExecutable
method, which needs additional refactoring.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10996
llvm-svn: 241672
This can be in the cpp file rather than the header file, so moving
it there.
Summary: Move ProcessKDP's StringExtractor include.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11018
llvm-svn: 241649
Summary:
Fix StringExtractor.h issues.
* source/Plugins/Process/MacOSX-Kernel/ProcessKDP.cpp
(#include "Utility/StringExtractor.h): Not needed, this is already
included by ProcessKDP.h
* unittests/Utility/StringExtractorTest.cpp
(#include "Utility/StringExtractor.h): Update include path to the
new location.
Reviewers: labath, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10995
llvm-svn: 241596
Previously we accepted a frame as correct result if the PC pointed
into an executable section of code. The isse with that approac is
that if we calculated PC correctly but messed up the value of CFA
then unwinding from the next fram will most likely fail.
With this change I modify the logic with keeping the requirement
for PC to point to an executable section and also check that we can
continue the unwind from the frame we calculated. If continuing from
the frame calculated with the primary unwind plan isn't working then
fall back to the fallback plan with the hope for a better frame (if
the fallback plan won't help then we acceot the frame from the
primary plan).
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10932
llvm-svn: 241434
Previously if the instruction emulation based unwind plan failed then
we fall back to the arch default unwind plan. Change it to fall back
to the eh_frame based one even on non call sites if we have eh_frame
as that one tend to be more reliable.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10902
llvm-svn: 241334
Summary:
This changes PtraceWrapper to return an Error, while the actual result is in an pointer parameter
(instead of the other way around). Also made a couple of PtraceWrapper arguments default to zero.
This arrangement makes a lot of the code much simpler.
Test Plan: Tests pass on linux. It compiles on android arm64/mips64.
Reviewers: chaoren, mohit.bhakkad
Subscribers: tberghammer, aemerson, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10808
llvm-svn: 241079
Make the python target definition file have highest priority so that we can set
the remote stub breakpoint pc offset using it.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: ted, deepak2427, lldb-commits
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10775
llvm-svn: 241063
- Avoid sending the qfThreadInfo, qsThreadInfo packets if we have a stop reply packet with the threads already (save 2 round trip packets)
- Include the qname, qserial and qkind in the JSON info
- Report the qname, qserial and qkind to the thread so it can cache it to avoid many packets on MacOSX and iOS
- Don't clear all discoverable settings when we exec, just the ones we need to saves 1-5 packets for each exec.
llvm-svn: 240988
Summary:
This removes a lot of boilerplate, which was needed to execute monitor operations. Previously one
needed do declare a separate class for each operation which would manually capture all needed
arguments, which was very verbose. In addition to less code, I believe this also makes the code
more readable, since now the implementation of the operation can be physically closer to the code
that invokes it.
Test Plan: Code compiles on x86, arm and mips, tests pass on x86 linux.
Reviewers: tberghammer, chaoren
Subscribers: aemerson, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10694
llvm-svn: 240772
There are a couple of bugs in the XML register info handling which this patch fixes:
+ conflicting variable names in lambda, both capture list and parameters contains a variable called 'name'.
+ prev_reg_num, which sets the register number, should be incremented after each register is processed.
+ Windows errors regarding empty strings and the 'xi:' prefix disappearing from 'xi:include' node name.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, deepak2427
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10731
llvm-svn: 240768
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
The values of four important registers are included in logs for ptrace
PT_GETREGS. Put all four on the same line for a more compact log. Also
use the proper 64-bit register names.
llvm-svn: 240581
With the removal of ProcessLinux in r240543 this code is used only on
FreeBSD. FreeBSD isn't affected by whichever issue originally prompted
the addition of SetResumeState, so just remove it.
As discussed on the mailing list (and mentioned in a FIXME comment)
it shouldn't be called there.
llvm-svn: 240550
Summary:
Currently, the local-only path fails about 50% of the tests, which means that: a) nobody is using
it; and b) the remote debugging path is much more stable. This commit removes the local-only
linux debugging code (ProcessLinux) and makes remote-loopback the only way to debug local
applications (the same architecture as OSX). The ProcessPOSIX code is moved to the FreeBSD
directory, which is now the only user of this class. Hopefully, FreeBSD will soon move to the new
architecture as well and then this code can be removed completely.
Test Plan: Test suite passes via remote stub.
Reviewers: emaste, vharron, ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10661
llvm-svn: 240543
* Add and fix the emulation of several instruction.
* Disable frame pointer usage on Android.
* Specify return address register for the unwind plan instead of explict
tracking the value of RA.
* Replace prologue detection heuristics (unreliable in several cases)
with a logic to follow the branch instructions and restore the CFI
value based on them. The target address for a branch should have the
same CFI as the source address (if they are in the same function).
* Handle symbols in ELF files where the symbol size is not specified
with calcualting their size based on the next symbol (already done
in MachO files).
* Fix architecture in FuncUnwinders with filling up the inforamtion
missing from the object file with the architecture of the target.
* Add code to read register wehn the value is set to "IsSame" as it
meanse the value of a register in the parent frame is the same as the
value in the current frame.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10447
llvm-svn: 240533
A "qSymbol::" is sent when shared libraries have been loaded by hooking into the Process::ModulesDidLoad() function from within ProcessGDBRemote. This function was made virtual so that the ProcessGDBRemote version is called, which then first calls the Process::ModulesDidLoad(), and then it queries for any symbol lookups that the remote GDB server might want to do.
This allows debugserver to request the "dispatch_queue_offsets" symbol so that it can read the queue name, queue kind and queue serial number and include this data as part of the stop reply packet. Previously each thread would have to do 3 memory reads in order to read the queue name.
This is part of reducing the number of packets that are sent between LLDB and the remote GDB server.
<rdar://problem/21494354>
llvm-svn: 240466
This patch adds a listener to the AynscThread in ProcessGDBRemote, specifically for dealing with any async notification packets.
From the broadcast our listener receives we can process the notify packet from the event data. A handler function then sets the thread stop info from this packet, and updates lldb by setting the process private state to stopped. Allowing the async thread to go back to sleep and getting the main thread to handle the implications of a state change.
When sending a vCont in nonstop mode we also get a different reply from all-stop mode, an OK response as opposed to a stop reply. So a condition is added to handle this and set the process state without the stop-reply data.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, labath, ted, aidan.dodds, deepak2427
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10544
llvm-svn: 240397
SUMMARY:
This patch implements
1. Emulation of MIPS32 branch instructions
2. Enable single-stepping for MIPS32 instructions
3. Correction in emulation of MIPS64 branch instructions with delay slot
4. Adjust breakpoint address when breakpoint is hit in a forbidden slot of compact branch instruction
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan, lldb-commits, emaste, nitesh.jain
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10596
llvm-svn: 240373
We have been working on reducing the packet count that is sent between LLDB and the debugserver on MacOSX and iOS. Our approach to this was to reduce the packets required when debugging multiple threads. We currently make one qThreadStopInfoXXXX call (where XXXX is the thread ID in hex) per thread except the thread that stopped with a stop reply packet. In order to implement multiple thread infos in a single reply, we need to use structured data, which means JSON. The new jThreadsInfo packet will attempt to retrieve all thread infos in a single packet. The data is very similar to the stop reply packets, but packaged in JSON and uses JSON arrays where applicable. The JSON output looks like:
[
{ "tid":1580681,
"metype":6,
"medata":[2,0],
"reason":"exception",
"qaddr":140735118423168,
"registers": {
"0":"8000000000000000",
"1":"0000000000000000",
"2":"20fabf5fff7f0000",
"3":"e8f8bf5fff7f0000",
"4":"0100000000000000",
"5":"d8f8bf5fff7f0000",
"6":"b0f8bf5fff7f0000",
"7":"20f4bf5fff7f0000",
"8":"8000000000000000",
"9":"61a8db78a61500db",
"10":"3200000000000000",
"11":"4602000000000000",
"12":"0000000000000000",
"13":"0000000000000000",
"14":"0000000000000000",
"15":"0000000000000000",
"16":"960b000001000000",
"17":"0202000000000000",
"18":"2b00000000000000",
"19":"0000000000000000",
"20":"0000000000000000"},
"memory":[
{"address":140734799804592,"bytes":"c8f8bf5fff7f0000c9a59e8cff7f0000"},
{"address":140734799804616,"bytes":"00000000000000000100000000000000"}
]
}
]
It contains an array of dicitionaries with all of the key value pairs that are normally in the stop reply packet. Including the expedited registers. Notice that is also contains expedited memory in the "memory" key. Any values in this memory will get included in a new L1 cache in lldb_private::Process where if a memory read request is made and that memory request fits into one of the L1 memory cache blocks, it will use that memory data. If a memory request fails in the L1 cache, it will fall back to the L2 cache which is the same block sized caching we were using before these changes. This allows a process to expedite memory that you are likely to use and it reduces packet count. On MacOSX with debugserver, we expedite the frame pointer backchain for a thread (up to 256 entries) by reading 2 pointers worth of bytes at the frame pointer (for the previous FP and PC), and follow the backchain. Most backtraces on MacOSX and iOS now don't require us to read any memory!
We will try these packets out and if successful, we should port these to lldb-server in the near future.
<rdar://problem/21494354>
llvm-svn: 240354
For some communication channels, sending large packets can be very
slow. In those cases, it may be faster to compress the contents of
the packet on the target device and decompress it on the debug host
system. For instance, communicating with a device using something
like Bluetooth may be an environment where this tradeoff is a good one.
This patch adds a new field to the response to the "qSupported" packet
(which returns a "qXfer:features:" response) -- SupportedCompressions
and DefaultCompressionMinSize. These tell you what the remote
stub can support.
lldb, if it wants to enable compression and can handle one of those
algorithms, it can send a QEnableCompression packet specifying the
algorithm and optionally the minimum packet size to use compression
on. lldb may have better knowledge about the best tradeoff for
a given communication channel.
I added support to debugserver an lldb to use the zlib APIs
(if -DHAVE_LIBZ=1 is in CFLAGS and -lz is in LDFLAGS) and the
libcompression APIs on Mac OS X 10.11 and later
(if -DHAVE_LIBCOMPRESSION=1). libz "zlib-deflate" compression.
libcompression can support deflate, lz4, lzma, and a proprietary
lzfse algorithm. libcompression has been hand-tuned for Apple
hardware so it should be preferred if available.
debugserver currently only adds the SupportedCompressions when
it is being run on an Apple watch (TARGET_OS_WATCH). Comment
that #if out from RNBRemote.cpp if you want to enable it to
see how it works. I haven't tested this on a native system
configuration but surely it will be slower to compress & decompress
the packets in a same-system debug session.
I haven't had a chance to add support for this to
GDBRemoteCommunciationServer.cpp yet.
<rdar://problem/21090180>
llvm-svn: 240066
Summary:
Memory reads using the ptrace API need to be executed on a designated thread
and in 4-byte increments. The process_vm_read syscall has no such requirements
and it is about 50 times faster. This patch makes lldb-server use the faster
API if the target kernel supports it. Kernel support for this feature is
determined at runtime. Using process_vm_writev in the same manner is more
complicated since this syscall (unlike ptrace) respects page protection settings
and so it cannot be used to set a breakpoint, since code pages are typically
read-only. However, memory writes are not currently a performance bottleneck as
they happen much more rarely.
Test Plan: all tests continue to pass
Reviewers: ovyalov, vharron
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10488
llvm-svn: 239924
In order to support asynchronous notifications for non-stop mode this patch adds a packet read thread. This is done by implementing AppendBytesToCache() from the communications class, which continually reads packets into a packet queue. To initialize this thread StartReadThread() must be called by the client, so since llgs and platform tools use the GBDRemoteCommunicatos code they must also call this function as well as ProcessGDBRemote.
When the read thread detects an async notify packet it broadcasts this event, where the matching listener will be added in the next non-stop patch.
Packets are now accessed by calling ReadPacket() which pops a packet from the queue, instead of using WaitForPacketWithTimeoutMicroSecondsNoLock()
Reviewers: vharron, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, labath, ted, domipheus, deepak2427
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10085
llvm-svn: 239824
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
Since interaction with the python interpreter is moving towards
being more isolated, we won't be able to include this header from
normal files anymore, all includes of it should be localized to
the python library which will live under source/bindings/API/Python
after a future patch.
None of the files that were including this header actually depended
on it anyway, so it was just a dead include in every single instance.
llvm-svn: 238581
Summary:
Previously, we reported inferior receiving SIGSEGV (or SIGILL, SIGFPE, SIGBUS) as an "exception"
to LLDB, presumably to match OSX behaviour. Beside the fact that we were basically lying to the
user, this was also causing problems with inferiors which handle SIGSEGV by themselves, since
LLDB was unable to reinject this signal back into the inferior.
This commit changes LLGS to report SIGSEGV as a signal. This has necessitated some changes in the
test-suite, which had previously used eStopReasonException to locate threads that crashed. Now it
uses platform-specific logic, which in the case of linux searches for eStopReasonSignaled with
signal=SIGSEGV.
I have also added the ability to set the description of StopInfoUnixSignal using the description
field of the gdb-remote packet. The linux stub uses this to display additional information about
the segfault (invalid address, address access protected, etc.).
Test Plan: All tests pass on linux and osx.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg, emaste
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10057
llvm-svn: 238549
qEcho:%s
where '%s' is any valid string. The response to this packet is the exact packet itself with no changes, just reply with what you received!
This will help us to recover from packets timing out much more gracefully. Currently if a packet times out, LLDB quickly will hose up the debug session. For example, if we send a "abc" packet and we expect "ABC" back in response, but the "abc" command takes longer than the current timeout value this will happen:
--> "abc"
<-- <<<error: timeout>>>
Now we want to send "def" and get "DEF" back:
--> "def"
<-- "ABC"
We got the wrong response for the "def" packet because we didn't sync up with the server to clear any current responses from previously issues commands.
The fix is to modify GDBRemoteCommunication::WaitForPacketWithTimeoutMicroSecondsNoLock() so that when it gets a timeout, it syncs itself up with the client by sending a "qEcho:%u" where %u is an increasing integer, one for each time we timeout. We then wait for 3 timeout periods to sync back up. So the above "abc" session would look like:
--> "abc"
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
--> "qEcho:1"
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
<-- "abc"
<-- "qEcho:1"
The first timeout is from trying to get the response, then we know we timed out and we send the "qEcho:1" packet and wait for 3 timeout periods to get back in sync knowing that we might actually get the response for the "abc" packet in the mean time...
In this case we would actually succeed in getting the response for "abc". But lets say the remote GDB server is deadlocked and will never response, it would look like:
--> "abc"
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
--> "qEcho:1"
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
We then disconnect and say we lost connection.
We might also have a bad GDB server that just dropped the "abc" packet on the floor. We can still recover in this case and it would look like:
--> "abc"
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
--> "qEcho:1"
<-- "qEcho:1"
Then we know our remote GDB server is still alive and well, and it just dropped the "abc" response on the floor and we can continue to debug.
<rdar://problem/21082939>
llvm-svn: 238530
Summary:
Previously, we wait()ed for events from the inferiors process group. This is resulted in a
failure if the inferior changed its process group in the middle of execution. To avoid this, I
pass -1 to the wait() call. The flag __WNOTHREAD makes sure we don't actually wait for events
from any process, but only the processes(threads) which are our children (or traced by us). Since
this happens on the monitor thread, which is dedicated to monitoring a single inferior, we will
be getting events only from this inferior.
Test Plan: All tests pass on linux. I have added a test to check the new functionality.
Reviewers: chaoren, ovyalov
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10061
llvm-svn: 238405
In ProcessGDBRemote we currently have a single packet, m_last_stop_packet, used to set the thread stop info.
However in non-stop mode we can receive several stop reply packets in a sequence for different threads. As a result we need to use a container to hold them before they are processed.
This patch also changes the return type of CheckPacket() so we can detect async notification packets.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: labath, ted, deepak2427, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9853
llvm-svn: 238323
This change also get rid of an unused Debugger instance in
GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS and the command interpreter from
lldb-platform what was used only for enabling logging.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9876
llvm-svn: 238319
We know have on API we should use for all XML within LLDB in XML.h. This API will be easy back the XML parsing by different libraries in case libxml2 doesn't work on all platforms. It also allows the only place for #ifdef ...XML... to be in XML.h and XML.cpp. The API is designed so it will still compile with or without XML support and there is a static function "bool XMLDocument::XMLEnabled()" that can be called to see if XML is currently supported. All APIs will return errors, false, or nothing when XML isn't enabled.
Converted all locations that used XML over to using the host XML implementation.
Added target.xml support to debugserver. Extended the XML register format to work for LLDB by including extra attributes and elements where needed. This allows the target.xml to replace the qRegisterInfo packets and allows us to fetch all register info in a single packet.
<rdar://problem/21090173>
llvm-svn: 238224
This change reorganize the register read/write code inside lldb-server on Linux
with moving the architecture independent code into a new class called
NativeRegisterContextLinux and all of the architecture dependent code into the
appropriate NativeRegisterContextLinux_* class. As part of it the compilation of
the architecture specific register contexts are only compiled on the specific
architecture because they can't be used in other cases.
The purpose of this change is to remove a lot of duplicated code from the different
register contexts and to remove the architecture dependent codes from the global
NativeProcessLinux class.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9935
llvm-svn: 238196
The main issue was the Communication::Disconnect() was calling its Connection::Disconnect() but this wouldn't release the pipes that the ConnectionFileDescriptor was using. We also have someone that is holding a strong reference to the Process so that when you re-run, target replaces its m_process_sp, but it doesn't get destructed because someone has a strong reference to it. I need to track that down. But, even if we have a strong reference to the a process that is outstanding, we need to call Process::Finalize() to have it release as much of its resources as possible to avoid memory bloat.
Removed the ProcessGDBRemote::SetExitStatus() override and replaced it with ProcessGDBRemote::DidExit().
Now we aren't leaking file descriptors and the stand alone test suite should run much better.
llvm-svn: 238089
Summary: This enables correct handling of real time signals by lldb.
Test Plan: Added a test that verifies handling of SIGRTMIN
Reviewers: tberghammer, ovyalov
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9911
llvm-svn: 238009
Summary:
Previously, NPL tried to reinject SIGSTOP into the inferior in an attempt to get the process to
start in the group-stop state. This was:
a) wrong (reinjection should be controlled by "process handle" lldb setting)
b) racy (it should use Resume for transparent resuming instead of RequestResume)
c) broken (llgs crashed on inferior SIGSTOP)
With this change, SIGSTOP is handled just like any other signal delivered to the inferior: we
stop all threads and report signal reception to lldb. SIGSTOP reinjection does not behave the
same way as it would outside the debugger, but simulating this is a hard problem and is not
normally necessary.
Test Plan: I have added a test which verifies we get SIGSTOP reports and we do not crash.
Reviewers: ovyalov, chaoren
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9852
llvm-svn: 237880
Summary:
The test in TestPlatformCommand which runs "platform process list" has
been timing out for Android when running running dosep.py with
LLDB_TEST_THREADS=8. This patch increases the packet timeout to a large
value of 1min to accommodate the long time required for a response for
the qfProcessInfo packet on Android.
Test Plan: LLDB_TEST_THREADS=8 ./dosep.py on Android.
Reviewers: chaoren
Reviewed By: chaoren
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9866
llvm-svn: 237752
Summary:
There was an issue in NPL, where we attempted removal of temporary breakpoints (used to implement
software single stepping), while some threads of the process were running. This is a problem
since we currently always use the main thread's ID in the removal ptrace call. Therefore, if the
main thread was still running, the ptrace call would fail, and the software breakpoint would
remain, causing all kinds of problems. This change removes the breakpoints after all threads have
stopped. This fixes TestExitDuringStep on Android arm and can also potentially help in other
situations, as previously the breakpoint would not get removed if the thread stopped for another
reason.
Test Plan: TestExitDuringStep passes, other tests remain unchanged.
Reviewers: tberghammer
Subscribers: tberghammer, aemerson, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9792
llvm-svn: 237448
Summary:
This is the same issue as we had in D9145 for thread creation. Going through the full
ThreadDidStop/RequestResume cycle can cause a deferred notification to fire, which is not correct
when we are ignoring an event and resuming the thread. In this case it doesn't matter much since
the thread will die after that anyway, but for correctness, we should do the same thing here.
Also treating the SIGTRAP case the same way.
Test Plan: Tests continue to pass.
Reviewers: chaoren, ovyalov
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9696
llvm-svn: 237445
r237411 exposed the following issue: ProcessGDBRemote used the description field in the
stop-reply to set the description of the StopInfo. In the case of watchpoints, the packet
description contains the raw address that got hit, which is not exactly the information we want
to display to the user as the stop info. Therefore, I have changed the code to use the packet
description only if the StopInfo does not already have a description. This makes the behavior
equivalent to the pre-r237411 behavior as then the SetDecription call got ignored for
watchpoints.
llvm-svn: 237436
There were two versions of DoAttachToprocessWithId. One that takes
a pid_t, and the other which takes a pid_t and a ProcessAttachInfo.
There were no callers of the former version, and all of the
implementations of this version were simply forwarding calls to
one version or the other.
llvm-svn: 237281
Summary:
This patch is the beginnings of support for Non-stop mode in the remote protocol. Letting a user examine stopped threads, while other threads execute freely.
Non-stop mode is enabled using the setting target.non-stop-mode, which sends a QNonStop packet when establishing the remote connection.
Changes are also made to treat the '?' stop reply packet differently in non-stop mode, according to spec https://sourceware.org/gdb/current/onlinedocs/gdb/Remote-Non_002dStop.html#Remote-Non_002dStop.
A setting for querying the remote for default thread on setup is also included.
Handling of '%' async notification packets will be added next.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, ADodds, ted, deepak2427
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9656
llvm-svn: 237239
Removed some unused variables, added some consts, changed some casts
to const_cast. I don't think any of these changes are very
controversial.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9674
llvm-svn: 237218
Summary:
GetCurrentDirectory() returns the number of characters copied; 0 is a failure, not a success.
Add implementation for chdir().
Reviewers: zturner
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9300
llvm-svn: 237162
The defult implementation falls back to GetRegisterCount what
includes the debug registers also what shouldn't be displayed to
the user.
llvm-svn: 237111
Summary:
NPL::Resume attempted to handle eStateStopped as a resume action. However:
- GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS (the only user of NPL) never sets this action
- it could set this action in response to a vCont:t packet, but LLDB never produces this packet
- gdb-remote protocol documentation says vCont:t packet is used only in non-stop mode, but LLDB
does not support non-stop mode
- even if LLDB supported non-stop mode, this implementation of eStateStopped does something
different from what the spec says it should (according to spec, it should stop the specified
thread, but this seems to want to stop all threads).
Given the facts above, I believe we should remove this unused and untested code, as it probably
doesn't even work and removing it makes the rest of the code noticably simpler.
Reviewers: ovyalov, chaoren
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9657
llvm-svn: 237103
Summary:
Since the former-TSC events are now processed synchronously, there is no need for to protect them
with a separate mutex - all the actions are now guarded by the big m_threads_mutex.
With the mutex gone, the following functions, no longer have any purpose and were removed:
NotifyThreadCreate: replaced by direct calls to ThreadWasCreated
NotifyThreadStop: replaced by direct calls to ThreadDidStop
NotifyThreadDeath: folded into StopTrackingThread
ResetForExec: inlined as it consisted of a single line of code
RequestThreadResume(AsNeeded): replaced by direct calls to ResumeThread
StopThreads: removed, as it was never called
Test Plan: tests continue to pass
Reviewers: ovyalov, chaoren
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9603
llvm-svn: 237101
Summary:
Now that all thread events are processed synchronously, there is no need to have separate records
of whether a thread is running. This changes the (ever-dwindling) remains of the TSC to use
NativeThreadLinux as the authoritative source of the state of threads. The rest of the
ThreadContext we need has been moved to a member of NTL.
Test Plan: ninja check-lldb continues to pass
Reviewers: chaoren, ovyalov
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9562
llvm-svn: 236983
Summary:
New dotest options that allow arbitrary log channels and
categories to be enabled. Also enables logging for locally run
debug servers.
Log messages are separated into separate files per test case.
(this makes it possible to log in dosep runs)
These new log files are stored side-by-side with trace files in the
session directory.
These files are deleted by default if the test run is successful.
If --log-success is specified, even successful logs are retained.
--log-success is useful for creating reference log files.
Test Plan:
add '--channel "lldb all" --channel "gdb-remote packets" --log-success'
to your dotest options
Tested on OSX and Linux
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9594
llvm-svn: 236956
Converts the MAP_PRIVATE and MAP_ANON options to the target platform constants
(on which the call runs) rather than using those of the compiled host.
Test Plan:
Run test suite, the following tests requiring memory allocation / JIT support
begin passing when running mac -> linux:
Test11588.py
TestAnonymous.py
TestBreakpointConditions.py
TestCPPStaticMethods.py
TestCStrings.py
TestCallStdStringFunction.py
TestDataFormatterCpp.py
TestDataFormatterStdList.py
TestExprDoesntBlock.py
TestExprHelpExamples.py
TestFunctionTypes.py
TestPrintfAfterUp.py
TestSBValuePersist.py
TestSetValues.py
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9511
llvm-svn: 236933
Summary:
The stop callback is a remnant of the ThreadStateCoordinator. We don't need it now that TSC is
gone, as we know exactly which function to call when threads stop. This also removes some
stop-related functions, which were just forwarding calls to one another.
Test Plan: ninja check-lldb continues to pass
Reviewers: chaoren, ovyalov
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9531
llvm-svn: 236814
Summary:
These are remnants of the thread state coordinator, which are now unnecessary. I have basically
inlined the callbacks. No functional change.
Test Plan: Tests continue to pass.
Reviewers: chaoren, vharron
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9343
llvm-svn: 236707
Summary:
The lambda was always calling SetState(eStateStopped) with small variations, so I have inlined
the code. Given that we don't have the TSC anymore, I believe we don't need to be so generic.
The only major change here is the way we choose a stop reason thread when we're interrupting a
program on client request. Previously, we were setting a null stop reason for all threads and
then fixing up the reason for one victim thread in the lambda. Now, I make sure the stop reason
is set for the victim thread correctly in the first place.
I also take the opportunity to rename CallAfter* functions into something more appropriate.
Test Plan: All tests continue to pass.
Reviewers: chaoren, vharron
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9321
llvm-svn: 236595
Summary:
Since all TSC operations are now executed synchronously, TSC has become a little more than a
messenger between different parts of NativeProcessLinux. Therefore, the reason for its existance
has disappeared.
This commit moves the contents of the TSC into the NPL class. This will enable us to remove all
the boilerplate code in NPL (as it stands now, this is most of the class), which I plan to do in
subsequent commits.
Unfortunately, this also means we will lose the unit tests for the TSC. However, since the size
of the TSC has diminished, the unit tests were not testing much at this point anyway, so it's not
a big loss.
No functional change.
Test Plan: All tests continue to pass.
Reviewers: vharron, chaoren
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9296
llvm-svn: 236587
Summary:
This is a cleanup patch for thread state coordinator. After making processing of all events
synchronous, there is no need to have a a separate class for each event. I have moved back
processing of all events back into the TSC class. No functional change.
Test Plan: All tests continue to pass.
Reviewers: chaoren, vharron
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9254
llvm-svn: 236576
Summary:
This change removes the thread state coordinator thread by making all the operations it was
performing synchronous. In order to prevent deadlock, NativeProcessLinux must now always call
m_monitor->DoOperation with the m_threads_mutex released. This is needed because HandleWait
callbacks lock the mutex (which means the monitor thread will block waiting on whoever holds the
lock). If the other thread now requests a monitor operation, it will wait for the monitor thread
do process it, creating a deadlock.
To preserve this invariant I have introduced two new Monitor commands: "begin operation block"
and "end operation block". They begin command blocks the monitor from processing waitpid
events until the corresponding end command, thereby assuring the monitor does not attempt to
acquire the mutex.
Test Plan: Run the test suite locally, verify no tests fail.
Reviewers: vharron, chaoren
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9227
llvm-svn: 236501
Summary:
NativeProcessProtocol uses ReadMemory internally for setting/checking
breakpoints but also for generic memory reads (Handle_m), this change adds a
ReadMemoryWithoutTrap for that purpose. Also fixes a bunch of misuses of addr_t
as size/length.
Test Plan: `disassemble` no longer shows the trap code.
Reviewers: jingham, vharron, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9330
llvm-svn: 236132
This code is also an import from MacOSx implementation as SysV abi is
similar to what has been implemented for MacOS but may require a few tweaks.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8538
llvm-svn: 236098
Summary:
Without the synchronisation between the two thread creation events the following case could
happen:
- threads A and B are running. A hits a breakpoint. We note that we want to stop B.
- before we could stop it, B creates a new thread C, we get the stop notification for B, but we
don't record C's existence yet.
- we resume B
- before we get the C notification, B stops again (e.g. hits a breakpoint, gets our SIGSTOP,
etc.)
- we see all known threads have stopped, and we notify LLDB
- C notification comes, we note it's existence and resume it
=> we have an inconsistent state (LLDB thinks we've stopped, but C is running)
I resolve this by doing a blocking wait for for the C notification when we get the creation
notification on the parent (B) thread. This way the two events are synchronised, but we don't
need to introduce the intermediate "launching" state which would complicate handling of thread
states as all code would need to be aware of the third possible state.
Test Plan:
This is an obscure corner case, which I had not observed in practise, so I have no
test for it. I have tested that this commit does not regress in existing tests though.
Reviewers: chaoren, vharron
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9217
llvm-svn: 235969
Summary:
Currently, launching lldb-gdbserver from platform on Android requires root for
mkfifo() and an explicit TMPDIR variable. This should remove both requirements.
Test Plan: Successfully launched lldb-gdbserver on a non-rooted Android device.
Reviewers: tberghammer, vharron, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9307
llvm-svn: 235940
The previous read callback always read the value of the register what
caused problems when the emulator wrote some value into a register and
then expected to read the same value back. This CL add a register value
cache into the callbacks to return the correct value after a register
write also.
Test Plan: Stepping over BL/BLX instruction works on android-arm if the instruction set isn't change (other, unrelated patch will come for the case when we move to an other instruction set)
Reviewers: omjavaid, sas, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: labath, tberghammer, rengolin, aemerson, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9187
From: Tamas Berghammer <tberghammer@google.com>
llvm-svn: 235852
Summary:
LLGS leaks pipes (when launched by lldb), sockets (when launched by platform),
and/or log file to the inferior. This should prevent all possible leaks.
Reviewers: vharron, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9211
llvm-svn: 235615
The following situation occured if we were stopping a process (due to breakpoint, watchpoint, ...
hit) while a new thread was being created.
- process has two threads: A and B.
- thread A hits a breakpoint: we send a STOP signal to thread B and register a callback with
ThreadStateCoordinator to send a stop notification after the thread stops.
- thread B stops, but not due to the SIGSTOP, but on a thread creation event (of a new thread C).
We are unaware of our desire to stop, so we queue ThreadStopped and RequestResume operations
with TSC, so the thread can continue running.
- TSC receives the ThreadStopped event, sees that all threads are stopped and fires the delayed
stop notification.
- immediately after that TSC gets the RequestResume operation, so it resumes the thread.
At this point the state is inconsistent because LLDB thinks the process is stopped and will start
issuing commands to it, but one of the threads is in fact running. Things eventually break.
I address this problem by omitting the two TSC events altogether and Resuming the thread B
directly. This way the short stop is invisible to the TSC and the delayed notification will not
fire. We will fire the notification when we actually process the SIGSTOP on thread B.
When we get the initial SIGSTOP for thread C, we also resume the thread and send a
ThreadWasCreated message (is_stopped = false) to the TSC. This way, the TSC can stop the thread
on its own and handle the stop event later. This way the state of the new thread is correctly
handled as well (thanks Chaoren for the idea).
This patch also removes the synchronisation between the thread creation notifications on threads
B and C. The need for this synchronisation is unclear (the comments seem to hint that the new
thread is "fully created" only after we process both events, but I have noticed no regressions in
treating it as "created" even after just processing the initial C event), but it is a source for
many kinds of obscure races, since it introduces a new thread state "Launching" and the rest of
the code does not handle this state at all (what happens if we get a resume request from LLDB
while this thread is launching? what happens if we get a stop request? etc.).
This fixes the "spurious $O packet" problem in TestPrintStackTraces.py. However, the test remains
disabled on i386 due to the VDSO issue.
Test Plan:
TestPrintStackTraces works on x86_64. No regressions in the rest of the test suite.
Reviewers: vharron, chaoren
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9145
llvm-svn: 235579
Patch by Jaydeep Patil
Added MIPS32 and MIPS64 core revisions. This would be followed by register context and emulate-instruction for MIPS32.
DYLDRendezvous.cpp:
On Linux link map struct does not contain extra load offset field.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: bhushan, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, lldb-commits.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9190
llvm-svn: 235574
On linux-arm we use software single stepping where setting the new
breakpoint is only possible while the process is in stopped state.
This CL moves the setup code for single stepping form the SigneStep
operation into the Resum method to avoid an error when the process
already started when we want to step one of the thread.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9108
llvm-svn: 235494
Summary:
This commit moves the functionality of the operation thread into the new monitor thread. This is
required to avoid a kernel race between the two threads and I believe it actually makes the code
cleaner.
Test Plan: Ran the test suite a couple of times, no regressions.
Reviewers: ovyalov, tberghammer, vharron
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9080
llvm-svn: 235304
The arm instruction emulation handles only some of the opcode (including
all of them modifying the PC). For the rest of the instructions we can
advance the PC by the size of the instruction as they don't modify the
PC on any other way.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9076
llvm-svn: 235292
Summary:
This is the first phase of the merging of Monitor and Operation threads in NativeProcessLinux
(which is necessary since the two threads race inside Linux kernel). Here, I reimplement the
Monitor thread do use non-blocking waitpid calls, which enables later addition of code from the
operation thread.
Test Plan: Ran the test suite a couple of times, no regressions detected.
Reviewers: vharron, ovyalov, tberghammer
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9048
llvm-svn: 235193
the changes in r233255/r233258. Normally if lldb attaches to
a running process, when we call Process::Destroy, we want to detach
from the process. If lldb launched the process itself, ::Destroy
should kill it.
However, if we attach to a process and the driver calls SBProcess::Kill()
(which calls Destroy), we need to kill it even if we didn't launch it
originally.
The force_kill param allows for the SBProcess::Kill method to force the
behavior of Destroy.
<rdar://problem/20424439>
llvm-svn: 235158
Also add "#if defined( LIBXML2_DEFINED )" around code that already used libxml2 in SymbolVendorMacOSX.cpp.
Cleaned up some warnings in ProcessGDBRemote.cpp.
llvm-svn: 235144
Typically, LLGS only sends stdout/stderr notifications when the inferior
process is running.
Because LLGS reads stdout from the process in a separate thread, sometimes
these stdout notifications can be received after the server has sent a thread
stop message. The host isn't expecting stdout to be generated by the target
after a stop message and these messages interfere with the host's request/
response paradigm.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9024
llvm-svn: 234995
Linux arm don't support hardware stepping (neither mismatch
breakpoints). This patch implement signle stepping with doing a software
emulation of the next instruction and then setting a temporary
breakpoint at the address where the thread will stop next.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8976
llvm-svn: 234987
This patch is major step towards supporting lldb on ARM.
This adds all the required bits to support register manipulation on Linux Arm.
Also adds utility enumerations, definitions and register context classes for arm.
llvm-svn: 234870
The OperatingSystem plug-ins allow code to detect threads in memory and then say "memory thread 0x11111" is backed by the actual thread 1.
You can then single step these virtual threads. A problem arose when thread specific breakpoints were used during thread plans where we would say "set a breakpoint on thread 0x11111" and we would hit the breakpoint on the real thread 1 and the thread IDs wouldn't match and we would get rid of the "stopped at breakpoint" stop info due to this mismatch. Code was added to ensure these events get forwarded and thus allow single stepping a memory thread to work correctly.
Added a test case for this as well.
<rdar://problem/19211770>
llvm-svn: 234364
The FreeBSD debug register access is a little usual, but in any case
different from Linux. As it stands it's not possible to share an
implementation of DR_OFFSET, so revert that part of r233837 and provide
a separate FreeBSD and Linux implementation.
We'll still want a better fix, but this should restore basic
functionality (and the buildbot).
llvm-svn: 234048
There were a couple of real bugs here regarding error checking and
signed/unsigned comparisons, but mostly these were just noise.
There was one class of bugs fixed here which is particularly
annoying, dealing with MSVC's non-standard behavior regarding
the underlying type of enums. See the comment in
lldb-enumerations.h for details. In short, from now on please use
FLAGS_ENUM and FLAGS_ANONYMOUS_ENUM when defining enums which
contain values larger than can fit into a signed integer.
llvm-svn: 233943
Summary:
The implementation of GDBRemoteRegisterContext relies on byte offsets to cache
register values. GPR, FPR, etc. should start on different offsets. This is
correctly done in debugserver (in DNBArchImplX86_64.cpp), but not on Linux or
FreeBSD (in RegisterInfos_x86_64.h).
Test Plan: `register read st0` no longer overwrites `rbp` on Linux with LLGS.
Reviewers: sivachandra, jingham, emaste, ovyalov, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8685
llvm-svn: 233837
The automatic conversion from long int to lldb::addr_t caused sign
extension but for a register read it is an unwanted behaviour. Fix with
forcing different conversion path.
llvm-svn: 233176
Previously the remote module sepcification was fetched only from the
remote platform. With this CL if we have a remote process then we ask it
if it have any information from a given module. It is required because
on android the dynamic linker only reports the name of the SO file and
the platform can't always find it without a full path (the process can
do it based on /proc/<pid>/maps).
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8547
llvm-svn: 233061
The latter is uint64_t beacuse lldb supports arbitrary pid/platforms
but in this case we're using it as return value for fork() which might
return -1 to the parent in case the syscall fails.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8491
llvm-svn: 232926
Test Plan: No tests, this is just a debug logging function.
Reviewers: tberghammer
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8453
llvm-svn: 232815
Some application on Linux an all application on android close stdout and
stderr during the libc exit stage. Previously the master file descriptor
of the pseudo terminal used to communicate with the inferior was closed
on an EOF causing a race condition and a possible SIGHUP on process
exit. After this change the master file descriptor will be closed by the
destructor of the GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS class.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8436
llvm-svn: 232724
So that we don't have to update every single #include in the entire
codebase to #include this new header (which used to get included by
lldb-private-log.h, we automatically #include "Logging.h" from
within "Log.h".
llvm-svn: 232653
This moves the conversion of the open options to the target platform. On mac fcntl.h has different values for O_CREAT and O_TRUNC than on linux so by transmitting the standardized lldb open options we can correctly convert them on the target platform.
Test Plan:
On linux:
lldb-server p --listen *:1234
On mac:
lldb
platform select remote-linux
platform connect connect://ip-of-linux-box:1234
target create ~/path/to/linux/binary
b main
process launch
Binary is successfully pushed to linux remote, process successfully launches and break in the main method.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8395
llvm-svn: 232634
This removes ScriptInterpreterObject from the codebase completely.
Places that used to rely on ScriptInterpreterObject now use
StructuredData::Object and its derived classes. To support this,
a new type of StructuredData object is introduced, called
StructuredData::Generic, which stores a void*. Internally within
the python library, StructuredPythonObject subclasses this
StructuredData::Generic class so that it can addref and decref
the python object on construction and destruction.
Additionally, all of the classes in PythonDataObjects.h such
as PythonList, PythonDictionary, etc now provide a method to
create an instance of the corresponding StructuredData type. For
example, there is PythonDictionary::CreateStructuredDictionary.
To eliminate dependencies on PythonDataObjects for external
callers, all ScriptInterpreter methods now return only
StructuredData classes
The rest of the changes in this CL are focused on fixing up
users of PythonDataObjects classes to use the new StructuredData
classes.
llvm-svn: 232534
Some linux kernel reports a watchpoint hit after single stepping even
when no watchpoint was hit. This CL looks for a watchpoint which was hit
and reports a stop by trace if it haven't found any.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8081
llvm-svn: 232482
The file path is currently required on android because the executables
only contain the name of the system libraries without their path. This
CL add an extra field to the qModuleInfo packet to return the full path
of a modul and add logic to locate a shared module on android.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8221
llvm-svn: 232156
This CL change the logic used to terminate the monitor thread of
NativeProcessLinux to use a signal instead of pthread_cancel as
pthread_cancel is not supported on android.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8205
llvm-svn: 232155
Previously it was fetched only if the architecture isn't valid, but the
architecture can be valid without containing all information about the
current target (e.g. missing os).
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8057
llvm-svn: 232153
This was previously initialized by ProcessGDBRemote::Initialize but lldb-server does not contain ProcessGDBRemote anymore so this needs to be initialized directly.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8186
llvm-svn: 231966
Summary:
ProcessGDBRemote::AsyncThread nuked its own thread handle upon exiting. This prevented the main
thread from joining it correctly in StopAsyncThread. I address this by moving the Reset() call to
StopAsyncThread, after the join.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8218
llvm-svn: 231915
Thic change have effect wehn the AVX registers aren't available with
reporting the count of user registers without them.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8111
llvm-svn: 231638
Previously it was initialized by ProcessLinux but lldb-server don't
contain ProcessLinux anymore so it have to be initialized by
NativeProcessLinux also.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8080
llvm-svn: 231482
Setting it from the Target architecture cause problems when the target
archiutecture is filled just by examining the executable because in that
case the OS isn't set.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8035
llvm-svn: 231234
The deadlock occurred when the Attach or the Launch operation failed for
any reason.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8030
llvm-svn: 231231
Debugger.h is a huge file that gets included everywhere, and
FormatManager.h brings in a ton of unnecessary stuff and doesn't
even use anything from it in the header.
llvm-svn: 231161
This continues the effort to reduce header footprint and improve
build speed by removing clang and other unnecessary headers
from Target.h. In one case, some headers were included solely
for the purpose of declaring a nested class in Target, which was
not needed by anybody outside the class. In this case the
definition and implementation of the nested class were isolated
in the .cpp file so the header could be removed.
llvm-svn: 231107
Previously the operation thread is stopped with a cancel event but
pthread_cancel is not supported on android. This CL creates a custom
operation which asks the operation thread to exit without any pthread
call.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7937
llvm-svn: 230945
Summary:
syscalls involving pid/tid on 32 bit binaries are failing with
"Invalid argument" because the uint64_t arguments are too wide.
Reviewers: clayborg, ovyalov, sivachandra
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7963
llvm-svn: 230817
Summary:
Before this fix the FileSpec::GetPath() returned string which might be without '\0' at the end.
It could have happened if the size of buffer for path was less than actual path.
Test case:
```
FileSpec test("/path/to/file", false);
char buf[]="!!!!!!";
test.GetPath(buf, 3);
```
Before fix:
```
233 FileSpec test("/path/to/file", false);
234 char buf[]="!!!!!!";
235 test.GetPath(buf, 3);
236
-> 237 if (core_file)
238 {
239 if (!core_file.Exists())
240 {
(lldb) print buf
(char [7]) $0 = "/pa!!!"
```
After fix:
```
233 FileSpec test("/path/to/file", false);
234 char buf[]="!!!!!!";
235 test.GetPath(buf, 3);
236
-> 237 if (core_file)
238 {
239 if (!core_file.Exists())
240 {
(lldb) print buf
(char [7]) $0 = "/p"
```
Reviewers: zturner, abidh, clayborg
Reviewed By: abidh, clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, vharron, lldb-commits, clayborg, zturner, abidh
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7553
llvm-svn: 230787
Summary:
They'll be set anyway when the thread starts running, so the launching threads
should just ignore the set request.
Reviewers: ovyalov
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7914
llvm-svn: 230671
The DebuggerThread was detecting the launch error, but it was
ignored by ProcessWindows::DoLaunch, causing LLDB to wait forever
in the debugger loop.
This fixes the test case that explicitly attempts to launch a
process from a non-existant path.
Patch by Adrian McCarthy
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7874
llvm-svn: 230523
Earlier this week I was able to get clang-cl on Windows to be
able to self host. This opened the door to being able to
get a whole new slew of warnings for the Windows build.
This patch fixes all of the warnings, many of which were real
bugs.
llvm-svn: 230522
Add O_TRUNC when opening file for redirecting stdout and stderr of the
process. It is neccessary because if the file exists then on some
platform the original content is kept while it isn't overwritten by the
new data causing pollution of the saved stdout and stderr.
llvm-svn: 230492
This new class makes it easier to change the timeout of a
GDBRemoteCommunication instance for a short time and then restore it to
its original value.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7826
llvm-svn: 230319
With the previous implementation the protocol used by the client and the
server for the response was different and worked only by an accident.
With this change the communication is fixed and the return code from
mkdir and chmod correctly captured by lldb. The change also add
documentation for the qPlatform__[mkdir,chmod] packages.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7786
llvm-svn: 230213
Summary:
This patch enables evaluation of DWARF expressions setting the CFA during stack unwinding.
This makes TestSigtrampUnwind "almost" pass on linux. I am not enabling the test yet since the
symbol name for the signal trampoline does not get resolved properly due to a different bug, but
apart from that, the backtrace is sane.
I am unsure how this change affects Mac. I think it makes the unwinder prefer the DWARF unwind
plan instead of some custom platform-dependant plan. However, it does not affect the end result
- the stack unwinding works as expected.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7792
llvm-svn: 230211
Summary:
This change refactors UnwindPlan::Row to be able to store the fact that the CFA is value is set
by evaluating a dwarf expression (DW_CFA_def_cfa_expression). This is achieved by creating a new
class CFAValue and moving all CFA setting/getting code there. Note that code using the new
CFAValue::isDWARFExpression is not yet present and will be added in a follow-up patch. Therefore,
this patch should not change the functionality in any way.
Test Plan: Ran tests on Mac and Linux. No regressions detected.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7755
llvm-svn: 230210
CopyContext is necessary to safely get the XState, but LLDB doesn't currently
use the XState. CopyContext is available as of Windows 7 SP1, so it can't be
used on Vista. Furthermore, it requires the Windows 8 SDK it compile,
making the baseline for compiling and running LLDB higher than necessary.
Patch by: Adrian McCarthy
Reviewed by: Zachary Turner
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7572
llvm-svn: 229710
This commit merges lldb-platform and lldb-gdbserver into a single binary
of the same size as each of the previous individual binaries. Execution
mode is controlled by the first argument being either platform or
gdbserver.
Patch from: flackr <flackr@google.com>
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7545
llvm-svn: 229683
Currently it is uses the same code used on linux. Will be replaced with
android specific code if needed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7613
llvm-svn: 229371
Fixed test case to copy redirected stdout/stderr files from remote
target to host
llgs wasn't bothering to put the pty master file handle in the right
place if stdout/stderr were redirected to a file. It is still needed
for stdin.
Corrected some log message text
llvm-svn: 229141
'-Winconsistent-missing-override' warning. I suggest folks use this to
ensure that override is consistently used to mark virtual function
overrides.
llvm-svn: 229084
both a user process dyld and for a kernel binary -- we
will decide which to prefer after one or both have been
located.
It would be faster to stop the search thorugh the core
segments one we've found a dyld/kernel binary - but that
may trick us into missing the one we would prefer.
<rdar://problem/19806413>
llvm-svn: 228910
Summary: Coverity warns that unsigned >= 0 is always true, and k_first_gpr_powerpc happens to be 0. Quiet Coverity by changing that comparison instead to a static_assert(), in case things change in the future.
Reviewers: emaste
Reviewed By: emaste
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7576
llvm-svn: 228908
We want to forward stdin when stdio is not disabled and when we're not
redirecting stdin from a file.
renamed m_stdio_disable to m_stdin_forward and inverted value because
that's what we want to remember.
There was previously a bug that if you redirected stdin from a file,
stdout and stderr would also be redirected to /dev/null
Adds support for remote target to TestProcessIO.py
Fixes ProcessIOTestCase.test_stdin_redirection_with_dwarf for remote
Linux targets
llvm-svn: 228744
Processes running on a remote target can already send $O messages
to send stdout but there is no way to send stdin to a remote
inferior.
This allows processes using the API to pump stdin into a remote
inferior process.
It fixes a hang in TestProcessIO.py when running against a remote
target.
llvm-svn: 228419
Summary:
After closing all the leaked file descriptors to the inferior tty, the following problem occured:
- when stdin, stdout and stderr are redirected, there are no slave descriptors open (which is good)
- lldb has a reader thread, which attempts to read from the master end of the tty
- this thread receives an EOF
- in response, it closes it's master end
- as this is the last open file descriptor for the master end, this deletes the tty and sends
SIGHUP to the inferior (this is bad)
I fix this problem by making sure the master end remains open for the duration of the inferior
process by storing a copy of the file descriptor in ProcessMonitor. I create a copy to avoid
ownership issues with the reading thread.
Reviewers: ovyalov, emaste
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7440
llvm-svn: 228391
* Fix cmake script for android x86
* Reorder includes to avoid collision between system macros and local
variables in clang framework
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7435
llvm-svn: 228388
* Set the state of the process into running/stepping on continue/step operations
* Add mutex to use transactions in Thread State Coordinator
** It is required because the events from two Signal Handler or form a Signal handler and a Resume request shouldn't overlap
* Send Stop Replay Packet only when the state of the process changed
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7374
llvm-svn: 228387
Summary:
This adds the register plumbing, as well as register reading in FreeBSD core
dumps. Further work on the POSIX/FreeBSD ProcessMonitor is required in order to
support ptrace access to these registers.
Reviewers: tfiala, emaste
Reviewed By: emaste
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7039
llvm-svn: 228278
Summary:
Both LLDB and LLGS are leaking file descriptors into the debugged process. This plugs the leak by
closing the unneeded descriptors. In one case I use O_CLOEXEC, which I hope is supported on
relevant platforms. I also added a regression test and plugged a fd leak in dosep.py.
Reviewers: vharron, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7372
llvm-svn: 228130
Remove implicit stop action on $vCont package for threads where no
explicit action or default action specified based on the specification
(they have to stay in there original state).
llvm-svn: 227933
NativeProcessLinux::MonitorSignal was automatically resuming threads
that stopped due to a signal. This is inconsistent with the
behavior of lldb and gdb. This change removes the automatic resume.
Fixes
TestSendSignal.py
TestSignalsAPI.py
if PLATFORM_LINUX_FORCE_LLGS_LOCAL is in the environment vars.
llvm-svn: 227918
Note this code path should not happen - it implies a bug in another part of
the code. For the thread to receive the stop signal as it is handled, the
and for it to already have a stop reason, it implies the kernel was able to
tell the thread that it stopped while it was stopped. More likely this
seems to indicate a bug where an actual thread start was not getting correctly
logged. If it does get hit, we'll want to understand the sequence to figure
out if it is truly legitimate or if it implies another bug.
llvm-svn: 227916
It looks like Shawn's fix addresses what the initial hijacking was trying
to accomplish per conversations with Greg and Jim. The hijacking was
causing several tests to hang (#61, #62, #63, #64, #67, possibly more).
These tests now just fail rather than hang with this modification.
llvm-svn: 227914
* When the thread state coordinator is told to skip sending a stop request
for a running thread that is ignored (e.g. the thread that steps in a
step operation is technically running and should not have a stop sent
to it, since it will stop of its own accord per the kernel step operation),
ensure the deferred signal notification logic still waits for the
skipped thread. (i.e. we want to defer the notification until the
stepping thread is indeed stopped, we just don't want to send it a tgkill).
* Add ThreadStateCoordinator::RequestResumeAsNeeded(). This variant of the
RequestResume() method does not call the error function when the thread
is already running. Instead, it just logs that the thread is already
running and skips the resume operation. This is useful for the case of
vCont;c handling, where we tell all threads that they should be running.
At the place we're calling, all we know is "we want this thread running if
it isn't already," and that's exactly what this command does.
* Formatting change (minor) in NativeThreadLinux logging.
llvm-svn: 227913
See https://github.com/tfiala/lldb/issues/75. Not fixed yet but
continuing to push this further.
Fixes:
* Resume() now skips doing deferred notifications if we're doing a
vCont;{c,C}. In this case, we're trying to start something up,
not defer a stop notification. The default thread action stop
mode pickup was triggering a stop because it had at least one
stop, which was wrong in the case of a continue. (Bug introduced
by previous change.)
* Added a variant to ThreadStateCoordinator to specify a set of
thread ids to be skipped when triggering stop notifications to
non-stopped threads on a deferred signal call. For the case of
a stepping thread, it is actually told to step (and is running)
for a brief moment, but the thread state coordinator would think
it needed to send the stepping thread a stop, which id doesn't
need to do. This facility allows me to get around that cleanly.
With this change, behavior is now reduced to something I think is
essentially a different bug:
* Doing a step into libc code from my code crashes llgs.
* Doing a next out of a function in my own code crashes llgs.
llvm-svn: 227912
Tracked down while working on https://github.com/tfiala/lldb/issues/75.
This is not a complete fix for that issue, but moves us farther along.
Fixes:
* When a thread step is requested via vCont:{s,S}, Resume() now marks
the stepping thread as (1) currently stepping and (2) does trigger
the deferred signal for the stepped thread. This fixes a bug where
we were actually triggering a deferred stop cycle here for the non-stepping
thread since the single step thread was not part of the Resume()
deferred signal mechanism. The stepping thread is also marked in
the thread state coordinator as running (via a resume callback).
* When we get the SIGTRAP signal for the step completion, we don't
do a deferred signal call - that happened during the vCont:{s,S}
processing in Resume() already. Now we just need to mark that
the stepping thread is now stopped. If this is the last thread
in the set that needs to stop, it will trigger the process/delegate
stop call that will notify lldb. Otherwise, that'll happen when
the final thead we're waiting for stops.
Misc:
* Fixed up thread stop logging to use a leading 0 (0x%PRIx32) so
we don't get log lines like 0x5 for 0x05 SIGTRAP.
llvm-svn: 227911
* Fixed bug in run loop where run loop return enum was being treated
erroneously like an int, causing the TSC event loop to terminate
prematurely.
* Added an explicit scope in NativeProcessLinux::Resume() for the
threads lock lifetime. (This was likely unnecessary but is
more explicit.)
* Fixed a bug in ThreadStateCoordinator where resume execution was
not updating the internal state about the thread assumed to be
running now. I'll add a test and upstream this in a moment.
* Added a verbose logging mechanism to event processing within
ThreadStateCoordinator. It is currently enabled when the
'log enable lldb thread' is true upon inferior launch/attach.
llvm-svn: 227909
This patch fixes TestRegisters on Linux with LLGS
Introduce GetUserRegisterCount on RegisterInfoInterface to distinguish
lldb internal registers (e.g.: DR0-DR7) during register counting.
Update GDBRemoteCommunicationServer to skip lldb internal registers on
read/write register and on discover register.
Submitted for Tamas Berghammer
llvm-svn: 226959
Make sure the selected platform is always used
Make sure that the host uses the connect://hostname to connect to both
the lldb-platform and the lldb-gdbserver rather than what the platform
reports as the hostname of the lldb-gdbserver
Make sure that lldb-platform uses the IP address on it's connection
back to the host instead of the hostname that the host sends to it
when launching lldb-gdbserver with the remote host information
Tested on OSX and Linux
llvm-svn: 226712
introduced subtle bugs in two places in
RegisterContextLLDB::GetFullUnwindPlanForFrame where
it specifically wanted to get an eh_frame unwind plan
and was using "Get CallSite UnwindPlan" as synonymous
with that. But now we have two different types of
unwind plan that can be returned in that case, and
compact unwind won't behaves as needed.
<rdar://problem/19528559>
llvm-svn: 226631
This hooks up the changes necessary to set the trap flag on the
CPU and properly manage the process and thread's resume state
and private state so that the ThreadPlan does its thing.
Stepping still doesn't work as of this change, because there are
some issues with stack frames where it doesn't update the thread's
frame list correctly when it breaks inside of a function, but
I will try to fix that separately.
llvm-svn: 226221
The refactor was motivated by some comments that Greg made
http://reviews.llvm.org/D6918
and also to break a dependency cascade that caused functions linking
in string->int conversion functions to pull in most of lldb
llvm-svn: 226199
These fix various issues with path handling and disable a few tests
which use features of LLVM which are not yet supported on Windows.
llvm-svn: 226042
This is currently controlled by a setting:
(lldb) settings set target.process.python-os-plugin-path <path>
Or clearing it with:
(lldb) settings clear target.process.python-os-plugin-path
The process will now reload the OperatingSystem plug-in.
This was implemented by:
- adding the ability to set a notify callback for when an option value is changed
- added the ability for the process plug-in to load the operating system plug-in on the fly
- fixed bugs in the Process::GetStatus() so all threads are displayed if their thread IDs are larger than 32 bits
- adding a callback in ProcessProperties to tell when the "python-os-plugin-path" is changed by the user
- fixing a crasher in ProcessMachCore that happens when updating the thread list when the OS plugin is reloaded
llvm-svn: 225831
it more generally available.
Add checks to UnwindAssembly_x86::AugmentUnwindPlanFromCallSite() so
that it won't try to augment an UnwindPlan that already describes
the function epilogue.
Add a test case for backtracing out of _sigtramp on Darwin systems.
This could probably be adapted to test the same thing on linux/bsd but
the function names of sigtramp and kill are probably platform
specific and I'm not sure what they should be.
llvm-svn: 225578
so that we will use the UnwindPlan's rule for providing the stack
pointer BEFORE we use the trick of using the callee's CFA address
as the stack pointer. When we're in a _sigtramp frame, the CFA of
the _sigtramp stack frame is not the same as the stack pointer value
when the async interrupt occurred -- we need to use the eh_frame
rules for retrieving the correct value.
<rdar://problem/18913548>
llvm-svn: 225427
This was causing a race condition where DoDestroy() would acquire
the lock and then initiate a shutdown and then wait for it to
complete. But part of the shutdown involved acquiring the same
lock from a different thread. So the main thread would timeout
waiting for the shutdown to complete and return too soon.
The end result of this is that SBProcess::Kill() was broken on
Windows.
llvm-svn: 225297
This fixes compilation failures in the 64-bit build of LLDB on Windows.
Patch by Aidan Dodds
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6704
llvm-svn: 224528
The issue with Thumb IT (if/then) instructions is the IT instruction preceeds up to four instructions that are made conditional. If a breakpoint is placed on one of the conditional instructions, the instruction either needs to match the thumb opcode size (2 or 4 bytes) or a BKPT instruction needs to be used as these are always unconditional (even in a IT instruction). If BKPT instructions are used, then we might end up stopping on an instruction that won't get executed. So if we do stop at a BKPT instruction, we need to continue if the condition is not true.
When using the BKPT isntructions are easy in that you don't need to detect the size of the breakpoint that needs to be used when setting a breakpoint even in a thumb IT instruction. The bad part is you will now always stop at the opcode location and let LLDB determine if it should auto-continue. If the BKPT instruction is used, the BKPT that is used for ARM code should be something that also triggers the BKPT instruction in Thumb in case you set a breakpoint in the middle of code and the code is actually Thumb code. A value of 0xE120BE70 will work since the lower 16 bits being 0xBE70 happens to be a Thumb BKPT instruction.
The alternative is to use trap or illegal instructions that the kernel will translate into breakpoint hits. On Mac this was 0xE7FFDEFE for ARM and 0xDEFE for Thumb. The darwin kernel currently doesn't recognize any 32 bit Thumb instruction as a instruction that will get turned into a breakpoint exception (EXC_BREAKPOINT), so we had to use the BKPT instruction on Mac. The linux kernel recognizes a 16 and a 32 bit instruction as valid thumb breakpoint opcodes. The benefit of using 16 or 32 bit instructions is you don't stop on opcodes in a IT block when the condition doesn't match.
To further complicate things, single stepping on ARM is often implemented by modifying the BCR/BVR registers and setting the processor to stop when the PC is not equal to the current value. This means single stepping is another way the ARM target can stop on instructions that won't get executed.
This patch does the following:
1 - Fix the internal debugserver for Apple to use the BKPT instruction for ARM and Thumb
2 - Fix LLDB to catch when we stop in the middle of a Thumb IT instruction and continue if we stop at an instruction that won't execute
3 - Fixes this in a way that will work for any target on any platform as long as it is ARM/Thumb
4 - Adds a patch for ignoring conditions that don't match when in ARM mode (see below)
This patch also provides the code that implements the same thing for ARM instructions, though it is disabled for now. The ARM patch will check the condition of the instruction in ARM mode and continue if the condition isn't true (and therefore the instruction would not be executed). Again, this is not enable, but the code for it has been added.
<rdar://problem/19145455>
llvm-svn: 223851
a register value that is live in the stack frame 0 register context.
Fixes a problem where retrieving a register value on stack frame #n
would involved O(n!) stack frame checks. This could be very slow on
a deep stack when retrieving register values that had not been
modified/saved by any of the stack frames. Not common, but annoying
when it was hit.
<rdar://problem/19010211>
llvm-svn: 223843
section for x86_64 and i386 targets on Darwin systems. Currently only the
compact unwind encoding for normal frame-using functions is supported but it
will be easy handle frameless functions when I have a bit more free time to
test it. The LSDA and personality routines for functions are also retrieved
correctly for functions from the compact unwind section.
This new code is very fresh -- it passes the lldb testsuite and I've done
by-hand inspection of many functions and am getting correct behavior for all
of them. There may need to be some bug fixing over the next couple weeks as
I exercise and test it further. But I think it's fine right now so I'm
committing it.
<rdar://problem/13220837>
llvm-svn: 223625
This reverts commit 4a5ad2c077166cc3d6e7ab4cc6e3dcbbe922af86.
Windows doesn't support select() for pipe objects, and this also fails
to compile on Windows. Reverting this until we can get it sorted out
to keep the windows build working.
llvm-svn: 223392
This is a temporary workaround to get deferred breakpoint
resolution working until Bug 21720 is addressed. Even with this
workaround, it will only resolve deferred breakpoints in the
executable module, and not in a shared library.
llvm-svn: 223273
Previously if we got a DoDestroy while stopped at a breakpoint, we
would detach and then say the process had exited. This is completely
wrong, as it resulted in the python script incorrectly assuming that
the process had actually exited and trying to delete the image, when
in fact it had done no such thing.
The fix employed here is that when we get a DoDestroy, we do 3 steps:
1) initiate a termination sequence on the process
2) If we were stopped handling an exception of any kind, mask it and
let the program resume, causing the program to see the termination
request and exit on its own.
3) Let the program exit normally, and close all of our handles before
returning control back to DoDestroy.
This fixes Bug 21722 and Bug 21723.
llvm-svn: 223272
These methods are difficult / impossible to implement in a way
that is semantically equivalent to the expectations set by LLDB
for using them. In the future, we should find an alternative
strategy (for example, i/o redirection) for achieving similar
functionality, and hopefully deprecate these APIs someday.
llvm-svn: 222775
UnwindLLDB::AddOneMoreFrame to try the fallback unwind plan on
that same stack frame before it tries the fallback unwind plan
on the "next" or callee frame.
In RegisterContextLLDB::TryFallbackUnwindPlan, when we're
trying the fallback unwind plan to see if it is valid, make
sure we change all of the object ivars that might be used in
the process of fetching the CFA & caller's saved pc value
and restore those if we decide not to use the fallback
unwindplan.
<rdar://problem/19035079>
llvm-svn: 222601
LLDB supports many different register numbering schemes, and these
are typically prefixed with an indicator that lets the user know
what numbering scheme is used. The gcc numbering scheme is
prefixed with gcc, and there are similar ones for dwarf, gdb,
and gcc_dwarf.
LLDB also contains its own internal numbering scheme, but the enum
for LLDB's numbering scheme was prefixed differently. This patch
changes the names of these enums to use the same naming scheme for
the enum values as the rest of the register kinds by removing gpr_
and fpu_ prefixes, and instead using lldb_ prefixes for all enum
values.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6351
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
llvm-svn: 222495
Running a diff against lldb-x86-register-enums.h and the file
modified in this patch, the two enums were completely identical.
Deleting one of them to reduce code noise.
llvm-svn: 222478
This implements the skeleton of a RegisterContext for Windows.
In particular, this implements support only for x86 general purpose
registers.
After this patch, LLDB on Windows can perform basic debugging
operations in a single-threaded inferior process (breakpoint,
register inspection, frame select, unwinding, etc).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6322
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
llvm-svn: 222474
where it is retrieving the Return Address register contents
on a target where that's a thing. If we fail to get a valid
RA, we force a switch to the fallback unwind plan. This patch
adds a sanity check for that fallback unwind plan -- it must
get a valid CFA for this frame in addition to being able to
retrieve the caller's PC -- and it correctly marks the unwind
rules as failing if the fallback unwind plan fails.
<rdar://problem/19010211>
llvm-svn: 222301
Previously using HostThread::GetNativeThread() required an ugly
cast to most-derived type. This solves the issue by simply returning
the derived type directly.
llvm-svn: 222185
Previously we were directly updating the thread list and stopping
and restarting the process every time threads were created. With
this patch, we queue up thread launches and thread exits, resolve
these all internally, and only update the threads when we get an
UpdateThreadList call. We now only update the private state on
an actual stop (i.e. breakpoint).
llvm-svn: 222178
This creates a TargetThreadWindows class and updates the thread
list of the Process with the main thread. Additionally, we
fill out a few more overrides of Process base class methods. We
do not yet update the thread list as threads are created and/or
destroyed, and we do not yet propagate stop reasons to threads as
their states change.
llvm-svn: 222148
RegisterContextLLDB. I have core files of half a dozen tricky
unwind situations on x86/arm and they're all working pretty much
correctly at this point, but we'll need to keep an eye out for
unwinder regressions for a little while; it's tricky to get these
heuristics completely correct in all unwind situations.
<rdar://problem/18937193>
llvm-svn: 221866
This sends notifications for module load / unload to the process
plugin, and also manages the state more accurately during the
loading sequence.
Similar work by Virgile Bello was referenced during the
implementation of this patch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6224
llvm-svn: 221807
Due to a previous multi-threaded design involving message
passing, we used message classes to pass event information
to the delegate. Since the multi-threaded design has gone
away, we simplify this by passing event arguments as direct
function parameters, which is more clear and easier to
understand.
llvm-svn: 221806
After r221575 TestCallStopAndContinue and TestCallThatRestarts started
crashing on FreeBSD with a null temporary_module_sp in
RegisterContextLLDB::InitializeNonZerothFrame().
llvm-svn: 221805
The addition of RegisterNumber introduced a bug where if the PC is stored in a
return address register, such as on ARM and PowerPC, this register number is
retrieved and used, but never checked in the row if it's saved. Correct this by
setting the variable that's used to the new register number.
Patch by Jason Molenda.
llvm-svn: 221790
Summary:
Taking advantage of the new 'CFAIsRegisterDereferenced' CFA register type, add
full stack unwind support to the PowerPC/PowerPC64 ABI. Also, add a new
register set for powerpc32-on-64, so the register sizes are correct. This also
requires modifying the ProcessMonitor to add support for non-uintptr_t-sized
register values.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, emaste
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6183
llvm-svn: 221789
Summary:
PowerPC handles the stack chain with the current stack pointer being a pointer
to the backchain (CFA). LLDB currently has no way of handling this, so this
adds a "CFA is dereferenced from a register" type.
Discussed with Jason Molenda, who also provided the initial patch for this.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda
Reviewed By: jasonmolenda
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6182
llvm-svn: 221788
This patch implements basic support for stopping at breakpoints
and resuming later. While a breakpoint is stopped at, LLDB will
cease to process events in the debug loop, effectively suspending
the process, and then resume later when ProcessWindows::DoResume
is called.
As a side effect, this also correctly handles the loader breakpoint
(i.e. the initial stop) so that LLDB goes through the correct state
sequence during the initial process launch.
llvm-svn: 221642
it in RegisterContext.cpp.
There's a lot of bookkeeping code in RegisterContextLLDB where it has
to convert between different register numbering schemes and it makes
some methods like SavedLocationForRegister very hard to read or
maintain. Abstract all of the details about different register numbering
systems for a given register into this new class to make it easier
to understand what the method is doing.
Also add register name printing to all of the logging -- that's easy to
get now that I've got an object to represent the register numbers.
There were some gnarly corner cases of this method that I believe
I've translated correctly - initial testing looks good but it's
possible I missed a corner case, especially with architectures which
uses a link-register aka return address register like arm32/arm64.
Basic behavior is correct but there are a lot of corner casese that are
handled in this method ...
llvm-svn: 221577
If a noreturn function was the last function in a section,
we wouldn't correctly back up the saved-pc value into the
correct section leading to us showing the wrong function in
the backtrace.
Also add a backtrace test with an attempt to elicit this
particular layout. It happens to work out with clang -Os
but other compilers may not quite get the same layout I'm
getting at that opt setting. We'll still be exercising the
basic noreturn handling in the unwinder even if we don't get
one function at the very end of a section.
<rdar://problem/16051613>
llvm-svn: 221575
Originally the idea was that we would queue requests to a master
thread that would dispatch them to other slave threads each
responsible for debugging an individual process. This might make
some scenarios more scalable and responsive, but for now it seems
to be unwarranted complexity for no observable benefit.
llvm-svn: 221561
In the llgs world, ProcessWindows will eventually go away and
we'll implement a different protocol. This patch decouples
ProcessWindows from the core debug loop so that this transition
will not be more difficult than it needs to be.
llvm-svn: 221405
Renamed monitor -> driver, to make clear that the implementation here
is in no way related to that of other process plugins which have also
implemented classes with similar names such as DebugMonitor.
Also created a DebugEventHandler interface, which will be used by
implementors to get notified when debugging events happen in the
inferiors.
llvm-svn: 221322
let's let lldb try the arch default unwind every time but not destructively --
it doesn't permanently replace the main unwind method for that function from
now on.
This fix is for <rdar://problem/18683658>.
I tested it against Ryan Brown's go program test case and also a
collection of core files of tricky unwind scenarios
<rdar://problem/15664282> <rdar://problem/15835846>
<rdar://problem/15982682> <rdar://problem/16099440>
<rdar://problem/17364005> <rdar://problem/18556719>
that I've fixed over the last 6-9 months.
llvm-svn: 221238
is "invalid" -- it is past the end of the stack trace. Add a new
method IsCompletedStackWalk() so we can tell if an invalid stack
frame is from a complete backtrace or if it might be worth re-trying
the last unwind with a different method.
This fixes the unwinder problems Ryan Brown was having with go
programs. The unwinder can (under the right circumstances) still
destructively replace unwind plans permanently - I'll work on
that in a different patch.
<rdar://problem/18683658>
llvm-svn: 221229
When processes are launched for debugging on Windows now, LLDB
will detect changes such as DLL loads and unloads, breakpoints,
thread creation and deletion, etc.
These notifications are not yet propagated to LLDB in a way that
LLDB understands what is happening with the process. This only
picks up the notifications from the OS in a way that they can be
sent to LLDB with subsequent patches.
Reviewed by: Scott Graham
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6037
llvm-svn: 221207
The details are: large packets (like large memory reads (m packets) or large binary memory reads (x packet)) can get responses that come in across multiple read() calls. The while loop that was added meant that if only a partial packet came in (like only "$abc" coming for a response) GDBRemoteCommunication::CheckForPacket() was called, it would deadlock in the while loop because no more data is going to come in as this function needs to be called again with more data from another read. So the original fix will need to be corrected and resubmitted.
<rdar://problem/18853744>
llvm-svn: 221181
Summary:
SIGPROF is used for profiling processes (with google-perftools for
instance), which results in the inferior receiving a SIGPROF from the
kernel every few milliseconds. Instead of stopping the debugging session
and notifying the user of this, we should just pass the signal and keep
running.
This follows the behavior we have in UnixSignals.cpp.
Test Plan: Run LLDB on linux with a binary using google-perftools, see that execution gets interrupted all the time because we receive SIGPROF. Apply the patch, everything works fine.
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5953
llvm-svn: 221011
Summary:
This adds preliminary support for PowerPC/PowerPC64, for FreeBSD. There are
some issues still:
* Breakpoints don't work well on powerpc64.
* Shared libraries don't yet get loaded for a 32-bit process on powerpc64 host.
* Backtraces don't work. This is due to PowerPC ABI using a backchain pointer
in memory, instead of a dedicated frame pointer register for the backchain.
* Breakpoints on functions without debug info may not work correctly for 32-bit
powerpc.
Reviewers: emaste, tfiala, jingham, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5988
llvm-svn: 220944
function because of a '1u' making it a 32-bit value
when it really needed to be a 64-bit value. Trivial to fix
once I figured out what was going on.
clang static analzyer fixit.
llvm-svn: 220022
in GetFullUnwindPlanForFrame() - the code was mostly checking
that we had an active Process and ABI but not always.
clang static analyzer fixit.
llvm-svn: 219772
This implements Host::LaunchProcess for windows, and in doing so
does some minor refactor to move towards a more modular process
launching design.
The original motivation for this is that launching processes on
windows needs some very windows specific code, which would live
most appropriately in source/Host/windows somewhere. However,
there is already some common code that all platforms use when
launching a process before delegating to the platform specific
stuff, which lives in source/Host/common/Host.cpp which would
be nice to reuse without duplicating.
This commonality has been abstracted into MonitoringProcessLauncher,
a class which abstracts out the notion of launching a process using
an arbitrary algorithm, and then monitoring it for state changes.
The windows specific launching code lives in ProcessLauncherWindows,
and the posix specific launching code lives in ProcessLauncherPosix.
When launching a process MonitoringProcessLauncher is created, and
then an appropriate delegate launcher is created and given to the
MonitoringProcessLauncher.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5781
llvm-svn: 219731
With this change, both local-process llgs and remote-target llgs stdout/stderr
handling from inferior work correctly.
Several log lines have been added around PTY and stdout/stderr redirection
logic on the lldb client side.
Regarding remote llgs execution, see the following:
With these changes, remote llgs with $O now works properly:
$ lldb
(lldb) platform select remote-linux
(lldb) target create ~/some/inferior/exe
(lldb) gdb-remote {some-target}:{port}
(lldb) run
The sequence above will correctly redirect stdout/stderr over gdb-remote $O,
as is needed for remote debugging. That sequence assumes there is a lldb-gdbserver
exe running on the target with {some-host}:{port}.
You can replace the gdb-remote command with a '(lldb) platform connect
connect://{target-ip}:{target-port}'. If you do this and have a
lldb-platform running on the remote end, it will go ahead and launch
llgs for lldb for each target instance that is run/attached.
For local debugging with llgs, the following sequence also works, and
uses local PTYs instead to avoid $O and extra gdb-remote messages:
$ lldb
(lldb) settings set platform.plugin.linux.use-llgs true
(lldb) target create ~/some/inferior/exe
(lldb) run
The above will run the inferior using llgs on the local host, and
will use PTYs rather than $O redirection.
This change also removes the logging that happened after the fork but
before the exec when llgs is launching a new inferior process. Some
aspect of the file handling during that portion of code would not do
the right thing with log handling. We might want to go back later
and have that communicate over a pipe from the child to parent to pass
along any messages that previously were logged in that section of code.
llvm-svn: 219578
See http://reviews.llvm.org/D5695 for details.
This change does the following:
Enable lldb-gdbserver (llgs) usage for local-process Linux debugging.
To turn on local llgs debugging support, which is disabled by default, enable this setting:
(lldb) settings set platform.plugin.linux.use-llgs-for-local true
Adds a stream-based Dump() function to FileAction.
Pushes some platform methods that Linux (and FreeBSD) will want to share with MacOSX from PlatformDarwin into PlatformPOSIX.
Reviewed by Greg Clayton.
llvm-svn: 219457
Adds a test to verify that a thread resume request marks the thread as running
after doing the resume callback. This test fails without the corresponding
ThreadStateCoordinator.cpp change.
Fixes the code where that state was not maintained.
llvm-svn: 219412
the backtrace, try falling back to the architecture default
unwind plan and see if we can backtrace a little further.
<rdar://problem/18556719>
llvm-svn: 219247
As part of getting ConnectionFileDescriptor working on Windows,
there is going to be alot of platform specific work to be done.
As a result, the implementation is moving into Host. This patch
performs the code move and fixes up call-sites appropriately.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5548
llvm-svn: 219143
Added tests and impl to make sure the following errors are reported:
* Notifying a created thread that we are already tracking.
* Notifying a thread death for a thread we don't know about.
llvm-svn: 218900
Now that ThreadStateCoordinator errors out on threads in unexpected states,
it has enough information to know which threads need stop requests fired
when we want to do a deferred callback on a thread's behalf. This change
adds a new method, CallAfterRunningThreadsStop(...), which no longer
takes a set of thread ids that require stop requests. It's much harder
to misuse this method and (with newer error logic) it's harder to
correctly use the original method. Expect the original method that takes
the set of thread ids to stop to disappear in the near future.
Adds several tests for CallAfterRunningThreadsStop().
llvm-svn: 218897
Added tests to verify that the coordinator signals an error if
the given thread to resume is unknown, and if the thread is through to
be running already.
Modified resume handling code to match tests.
llvm-svn: 218872
ThreadStateCoordinator changes:
* Most commands that run in the queue now take an error handler that
will be called with an error string if an error occurs during processing.
Errors generally stop the operation in progress. The errors are checked
at time of execution. This is intended to help flush out ptrace/waitpid/state management
issues as quickly as possible.
* Threads now must be known to the coordinator before stops can be reported,
resumes can be requested, thread deaths can be reported, or deferred stop
notifications can be made. Failure to know the thread will cause the coordinator
to call the error callback for the event being processed. Threads are introduced
to the system by the NotifyThreadCreate method.
* The NotifyThreadCreate method now takes the initial state of the thread being
introduces to the system. We no longer just assume the thread is running.
The test cases were cleaned up, too:
* A gtest test fixture is now used, which allows creating less verbose helper
methods that setup common pieces of callback code for some method invocations.
Net result: the tests are simpler to read and shorter to write.
llvm-svn: 218833
ThreadIDFunc => ThreadIDFunction
LogFunc => LogIDFunction
We try to avoid abbreviations/shortened names. Adjusted function parameter names
as well to replace _func with _function.
llvm-svn: 218773
r218568 added an explicit #include of the Linux ProcessMonitor.h to
POSIXThread.cpp, rather than including just "ProcessMonitor.h" and
relying on the build infrastructure for the appropriate paths.
For now add #ifdefs in the source to use the FreeBSD or Linux header
as appropriate; a cleaner fix (and perhaps some refactoring of the
POSIX classes) should still be done later.
llvm-svn: 218762
There is a state transition that seems potentially buggy that I am capturing and
logging here, and including an explicit test to demonstrate expected behavior. See new test
for detailed description. Added logging around this area since, if we hit it, we
may have a usage bug, or a new state transition we really need to investigate.
This is around this scenario:
Thread C deferred stop notification awaiting thread A and thread B to stop.
Thread A stops.
Thread A requests resume.
Thread B stops.
Here we will explicitly signal the deferred stop notification after thread B
stops even though thread A is now resumed. Copious logging happens here.
llvm-svn: 218683
the user level. It adds the ability to invent new stepping modes implemented by python classes,
and to view the current thread plan stack and to some extent alter it.
I haven't gotten to documentation or tests yet. But this should not cause any behavior changes
if you don't use it, so its safe to check it in now and work on it incrementally.
llvm-svn: 218642
The thread resume block is executed in the normal flow of thread
state queued event processing. The tests verify that it is executed
when we track the thread to be stopped and skipped when we track
it to already be running.
llvm-svn: 218638
Also added a test for the reset handling. The reset/state clearing happens
as a processed queue event. The only diff vs. standard processing is that
the exec clears the queue before queueing the activity to clear internal state.
i.e. once we get an exec, we really stop doing any other queue-based activity.
llvm-svn: 218629
A new thread arriving while a pending signal notification
is outstanding will (1) add the new thread to the list of
stops expected before the deferred signal notification is
fired, (2) send a stop request for the new thread, and
(3) track the new thread as currently running.
llvm-svn: 218578
See http://reviews.llvm.org/D5495 for more details.
These are changes that are part of an effort to support building llgs, within the AOSP source tree, using the Android.mk
build system, when using the llvm/clang/lldb git repos from AOSP replaced with the experimental ones currently in
github.com/tfiala/aosp-{llvm,clang,lldb,compiler-rt}.
llvm-svn: 218568
Tested two pending stops before notification, where one of the pending stop
requirements was already known to be stopped.
Tested pending thread stop before notification, then reporting thread with
pending stop died and verifies pending notification is made.
llvm-svn: 218559
Glad I did - caught a bug where the auto variable was not a reference
to a set and instead was a copy. I need to review rules on that!
llvm-svn: 218558
This change does the following:
* Remove test/c++/...
* Add gtest.
* Add gtest/unittest directory for unittesting individual classes.
* Add an initial Plugins/Process?linux/ThreadStateCoordinatorTest.cpp.
- currently failing a test (intentional).
- added a bare-bones ThreadStateCoordinator.cpp to Plugins/Process/Linux,
more soon. Just enough to prove out running gtest on Ubuntu and MacOSX.
* Added recursive make machinery so that doing a 'make' in gtest/ is
sufficient to kick off the existing test several directories down.
- Caveat - I currently short circuit from gtest/unittest/Makefile directly to
the one and only gtest/unittest/Plugins/Process/Linux directory. We'll need
to add the intervening layers. I haven't done this yet since to fix the
Xcode test failure correspondence, I may need to add a python layer which
might just handle the directory crawling.
* Added an Xcode project to the lldb workspace for gtest.
- Runs the recursive make system in gtest/Makefile.
- Default target is 'test'. test and clean are supported.
- Currently does not support test failure file/line correspondence.
Requires a bit of text transformation to hook that up.
llvm-svn: 218460
Changes include:
- fix it so you can select the "host" platform using "platform select host"
- change all callbacks that create platforms to returns shared pointers
- fix TestImageListMultiArchitecture.py to restore the "host" platform by running "platform select host"
- Add a new "PlatformSP Platform::Find(const ConstString &name)" method to get a cached platform
- cache platforms that are created and re-use them instead of always creating a new one
llvm-svn: 218145
The $A handler was unnecessarily waiting for the launched app to hit a stop
before returning. Removed this code.
Renamed the llgs inferior launching code to LaunchProcessForDebugging ()
to prevent it from possibly being mistaken as code that lldb-platform uses
to launch a debugserver process. We probably want to look at breaking out
llgs-specific and lldb-platform-specific code into separate derived classes,
with common code in a shared base class.
llvm-svn: 218075