This patch introduces a new type of ScriptedProcess: CrashLogScriptedProcess.
It takes advantage of lldb's crashlog parsers and Scripted Processes to
reconstruct a static debugging session with symbolicated stackframes, instead
of just dumping out everything in the user's terminal.
The crashlog command also has an interactive mode that only provide a
very limited experience. This is why this patch removes all the logic
for this interactive mode and creates CrashLogScriptedProcess instead.
This will fetch and load all the libraries that were used by the crashed
thread and re-create all the frames artificially.
rdar://88721117
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119501
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
Configuring lldb with `LLDB_ENABLE_PYTHON=OFF` and `LLDB_ENABLE_LUA=ON` results in a CMake error:
CMake Error at lldb/bindings/lua/CMakeLists.txt:47 (create_relative_symlink):
Unknown CMake command "create_relative_symlink".
Call Stack (most recent call first):
lldb/CMakeLists.txt:117 (finish_swig_lua)
This is because the CMake function `create_relative_symlink` only exists in `lldb/bindings/python/CMakeLists.txt`, and not in `lldb/bindings/lua/CMakeLists.txt`.
Move the function to `lldb/bindings/CMakeLists.txt`, so it is available for all language bindings.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114465
LLDB doesn't use only the python stable ABI, which means loading
it into an incompatible python can cause the process to crash.
_lldb.so should be named with the full EXT_SUFFIX from sysconfig
-- such as _lldb.cpython-39-darwin.so -- so this doesn't happen.
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112972
It is surprisingly difficult to write a simple python script that
can reliably `import lldb` without failing, or crashing. I'm
currently resorting to convolutions like this:
def find_lldb(may_reexec=False):
if prefix := os.environ.get('LLDB_PYTHON_PREFIX'):
if os.path.realpath(prefix) != os.path.realpath(sys.prefix):
raise Exception("cannot import lldb.\n"
f" sys.prefix should be: {prefix}\n"
f" but it is: {sys.prefix}")
else:
line1, line2 = subprocess.run(
['lldb', '-x', '-b', '-o', 'script print(sys.prefix)'],
encoding='utf8', stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
check=True).stdout.strip().splitlines()
assert line1.strip() == '(lldb) script print(sys.prefix)'
prefix = line2.strip()
os.environ['LLDB_PYTHON_PREFIX'] = prefix
if sys.prefix != prefix:
if not may_reexec:
raise Exception(
"cannot import lldb.\n" +
f" This python, at {sys.prefix}\n"
f" does not math LLDB's python at {prefix}")
os.environ['LLDB_PYTHON_PREFIX'] = prefix
python_exe = os.path.join(prefix, 'bin', 'python3')
os.execl(python_exe, python_exe, *sys.argv)
lldb_path = subprocess.run(['lldb', '-P'],
check=True, stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
encoding='utf8').stdout.strip()
sys.path = [lldb_path] + sys.path
This patch aims to replace all that with:
#!/usr/bin/env lldb-python
import lldb
...
... by adding the following features:
* new command line option: --print-script-interpreter-info. This
prints language-specific information about the script interpreter
in JSON format.
* new tool (unix only): lldb-python which finds python and exec's it.
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112973
This patch introduces Scripted Processes to lldb.
The goal, here, is to be able to attach in the debugger to fake processes
that are backed by script files (in Python, Lua, Swift, etc ...) and
inspect them statically.
Scripted Processes can be used in cooperative multithreading environments
like the XNU Kernel or other real-time operating systems, but it can
also help us improve the debugger testing infrastructure by writting
synthetic tests that simulates hard-to-reproduce process/thread states.
Although ScriptedProcess is not feature-complete at the moment, it has
basic execution capabilities and will improve in the following patches.
rdar://65508855
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95713
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
This patch introduces Scripted Processes to lldb.
The goal, here, is to be able to attach in the debugger to fake processes
that are backed by script files (in Python, Lua, Swift, etc ...) and
inspect them statically.
Scripted Processes can be used in cooperative multithreading environments
like the XNU Kernel or other real-time operating systems, but it can
also help us improve the debugger testing infrastructure by writting
synthetic tests that simulates hard-to-reproduce process/thread states.
Although ScriptedProcess is not feature-complete at the moment, it has
basic execution capabilities and will improve in the following patches.
rdar://65508855
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95713
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
In order to facilitate the writting of Scripted Processes, this patch
introduces a `ScriptedProcess` python base class in the lldb module.
The base class holds the python interface with all the - abstract -
methods that need to be implemented by the inherited class but also some
methods that can be overwritten.
This patch also provides an example of a Scripted Process with the
`MyScriptedProcess` class.
rdar://65508855
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95712
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
This patch introduces Scripted Processes to lldb.
The goal, here, is to be able to attach in the debugger to fake processes
that are backed by script files (in Python, Lua, Swift, etc ...) and
inspect them statically.
Scripted Processes can be used in cooperative multithreading environments
like the XNU Kernel or other real-time operating systems, but it can
also help us improve the debugger testing infrastructure by writting
synthetic tests that simulates hard-to-reproduce process/thread states.
Although ScriptedProcess is not feature-complete at the moment, it has
basic execution capabilities and will improve in the following patches.
rdar://65508855
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95713
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
In order to facilitate the writting of Scripted Processes, this patch
introduces a `ScriptedProcess` python base class in the lldb module.
The base class holds the python interface with all the - abstract -
methods that need to be implemented by the inherited class but also some
methods that can be overwritten.
This patch also provides an example of a Scripted Process with the
`MyScriptedProcess` class.
rdar://65508855
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95712
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
The Python code generated by SWIG is compatible with both Python 2 and
Python 3. The -py3 option enables Python 2 incompatible features such as
function annotations and abstract base classes.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96096
LLVM install component targets needs to be in the form of: install-{target}[-stripped]
I tested with:
```
cmake ... -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS="clang;lldb" -DLLVM_DISTRIBUTION_COMPONENTS="lldb;liblldb;lldb-python-scripts;" ...
DESTDIR=... ninja install-distribution
```
@JDevlieghere `finish_swig_python_scripts` is a really weird name for a distribution component, any reason that it has to be this way?
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86235
This patch is a big sed to rename the following variables:
s/PYTHON_LIBRARIES/Python3_LIBRARIES/g
s/PYTHON_INCLUDE_DIRS/Python3_INCLUDE_DIRS/g
s/PYTHON_EXECUTABLE/Python3_EXECUTABLE/g
s/PYTHON_RPATH/Python3_RPATH/g
I've also renamed the CMake module to better express its purpose and for
consistency with FindLuaAndSwig.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85976
After moving python.swig and lua.swig into their respective
subdirectories, the relative paths in these files were out of date. This
fixes that and ensures the appropriate include paths are set in the SWIG
invocation.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85859
Separate the CMake logic for Lua and Python to clearly distinguish
between code specific to either scripting language and the code shared
by both.
What this patch does is:
- Move Python specific code into the bindings/python subdirectory.
- Move the Lua specific code into the bindings/lua subdirectory.
- Add the _python suffix to Python specific functions/targets.
- Fix a dependency issue that would check the binding instead of
whether the scripting language is enabled.
Note that this patch also changes where the bindings are generated,
which might affect downstream projects that check them in.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85708