31 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jonas Devlieghere
091296f3e3
[lldb] Revert scripted symbol locator (#181945)
This revert #181334 and its follow-up PRs (including #181488, #181492,
#181493, #181494 and #181498) as well as Ismail's documentation changes
(#181594, #181717). The original commit causes a test failure in CI
(https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/181938) but the more I look
at the patch, the more I'm convinced it was not ready to land. It will
be easier to iterate on the feedback by re-landing this than by using
post-commit review.
2026-02-17 16:52:21 -08:00
rchamala
1ee03d1e09
[lldb] Add ScriptedSymbolLocator plugin for source file resolution (#181334)
## Summary                                                        
                                                                    
Based on discussion from
[RFC](https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-python-callback-for-source-file-resolution/83545),
this PR adds a new `SymbolLocatorScripted` plugin that allows Python
scripts to implement custom symbol and source file resolution logic.
This enables downstream users to build custom symbol servers, source
file remapping, and build artifact resolution entirely in Python.
                                                                    
  ### Changes

- Adds `LocateSourceFile()` to the SymbolLocator plugin interface,
called during source path resolution with a fully loaded `ModuleSP`, so
the plugin has access to the module's UUID, file paths, and symbols.
- Adds `SymbolLocatorScripted` plugin that delegates all four
SymbolLocator methods (`LocateExecutableObjectFile`,
`LocateExecutableSymbolFile`, `DownloadObjectAndSymbolFile`,
`LocateSourceFile`) to a user-provided Python class.
- Adds `ScriptedSymbolLocatorPythonInterface` to bridge C++ calls to
Python, with proper GIL management and error handling.
- Results for `LocateSourceFile` are cached per (module UUID, source
file) pair.
- The Python class is configured via: `settings set
plugin.symbol-locator.scripted.script-class module.ClassName`

  ### Python class interface

  ```python
  class MyLocator:
      def __init__(self, exe_ctx, args): ...
      def locate_source_file(self, module, original_source_file):
  ...
      def locate_executable_object_file(self, module_spec): ...
      def locate_executable_symbol_file(self, module_spec,
  default_search_paths): ...
      def download_object_and_symbol_file(self, module_spec,
  force_lookup, copy_executable): ...
```

  ### Test plan
```
  Added TestScriptedSymbolLocator.py with 3 test cases:
  - test_locate_source_file — verifies the locator resolves source
  files, receives a valid SBModule with UUID, and remaps paths correctly
  - test_locate_source_file_none_fallthrough — verifies returning
None falls through to default LLDB resolution, and that having no script
  class set works normally
  - test_invalid_script_class — verifies graceful handling of
  invalid class names without crashing
```

Co-authored-by: Rahul Reddy Chamala <rachamal@fb.com>
2026-02-14 07:39:00 -08:00
Med Ismail Bennani
4cd17eeaeb
[lldb/Interpreter] Implement ScriptedFrameProvider{,Python}Interface (#166662)
This patch implements the base and python interface for the
ScriptedFrameProvider class.

This is necessary to call python APIs from the ScriptedFrameProvider
that will come in a follow-up.

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <ismail@bennani.ma>

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <ismail@bennani.ma>
2025-11-06 11:54:17 -08:00
jimingham
36bce68b97
Add a scripted way to re-present a stop location (#158128)
This patch adds the notion of "Facade" locations which can be reported
from a ScriptedResolver instead of the actual underlying breakpoint
location for the breakpoint. Also add a "was_hit" method to the scripted
resolver that allows the breakpoint to say which of these "Facade"
locations was hit, and "get_location_description" to provide a
description for the facade locations.

I apologize in advance for the size of the patch. Almost all of what's
here was necessary to (a) make the feature testable and (b) not break
any of the current behavior.

The motivation for this feature is given in the "Providing Facade
Locations" section that I added to the python-reference.rst so I won't
repeat it here.

rdar://152112327
2025-10-09 08:37:21 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
97f6e53386
[lldb] Support CommandInterpreter print callbacks (#125006)
Xcode uses a pseudoterminal for the debugger console.

- The upside of this apporach is that it means that it can rely on
LLDB's IOHandlers for multiline and script input.
- The downside of this approach is that the command output is printed to
the PTY and you don't get a SBCommandReturnObject. Adrian added support
for inline diagnostics (#110901) and we'd like to access those from the
IDE.

This patch adds support for registering a callback in the command
interpreter that gives access to the `(SB)CommandReturnObject` right
before it will be printed. The callback implementation can choose
whether it likes to handle printing the result or defer to lldb. If the
callback indicated it handled the result, the command interpreter will
skip printing the result.

We considered a few other alternatives to solve this problem:

- The most obvious one is using `HandleCommand`, which returns a
`SBCommandReturnObject`. The problem with this approach is the multiline
input mentioned above. We would need a way to tell the IDE that it
should expect multiline input, which isn't known until LLDB starts
handling the command.
- To address the multiline issue,we considered exposing (some of the)
IOHandler machinery through the SB API. To solve this particular issue,
that would require reimplementing a ton of logic that already exists
today in the CommandInterpeter. Furthermore that seems like overkill
compared to the proposed solution.

rdar://141254310
2025-02-04 09:01:08 -08:00
rchamala
b6960e2a63
[lldb][ResolveSourceFileCallback] Update SBModule (#120832)
Summary:
RFC
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-python-callback-for-source-file-resolution/83545

SBModule will be used for resolve source file callback as Python
function arguments. This diff allows these things.

Can be instantiated from SBPlatform.
Can be passed to/from Python.

Test Plan:
N/A. The next set of diffs in the stack have unittests and shell test
validation

Co-authored-by: Rahul Reddy Chamala <rachamal@fb.com>
2025-01-06 09:17:58 -08:00
Med Ismail Bennani
f732157a9d
[lldb/Interpreter] Introduce ScriptedStopHook{,Python}Interface & make use of it (#109498)
This patch re-lands #105449 and fixes the various test failures.

---------

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <ismail@bennani.ma>
2024-09-20 16:55:47 -07:00
Adrian Prantl
b798f4bd50
[lldb] Make deep copies of Status explicit (NFC) (#107170) 2024-09-05 12:44:13 -07:00
Med Ismail Bennani
9a9ec228cd
[lldb] Make use of Scripted{Python,}Interface for ScriptedThreadPlan (#70392) (#96868)
This patch makes ScriptedThreadPlan conforming to the ScriptedInterface
& ScriptedPythonInterface facilities by introducing 2
ScriptedThreadPlanInterface & ScriptedThreadPlanPythonInterface classes.

This allows us to get rid of every ScriptedThreadPlan-specific SWIG
method and re-use the same affordances as other scripting offordances,
like Scripted{Process,Thread,Platform} & OperatingSystem.

To do so, this adds new transformer methods for `ThreadPlan`, `Stream` &
`Event`, to allow the bijection between C++ objects and their python
counterparts.

This just re-lands #70392 after fixing test failures.

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <ismail@bennani.ma>
2024-06-27 01:45:30 -07:00
Med Ismail Bennani
ae3f68066c
Revert "[lldb] Make use of Scripted{Python,}Interface for ScriptedThreadPlan (Reland #70392)" (#93153)
Reverts llvm/llvm-project#93149 since it breaks
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/68/builds/74799
2024-05-23 01:46:29 -07:00
Med Ismail Bennani
4cc6d0f4df
[lldb] Make use of Scripted{Python,}Interface for ScriptedThreadPlan (Reland #70392) (#93149)
This patch makes ScriptedThreadPlan conforming to the ScriptedInterface
& ScriptedPythonInterface facilities by introducing 2
ScriptedThreadPlanInterface & ScriptedThreadPlanPythonInterface classes.

This allows us to get rid of every ScriptedThreadPlan-specific SWIG
method and re-use the same affordances as other scripting offordances,
like Scripted{Process,Thread,Platform} & OperatingSystem.

To do so, this adds new transformer methods for `ThreadPlan`, `Stream` &
`Event`, to allow the bijection between C++ objects and their python
counterparts.

This just re-lands #70392 after fixing test failures.

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <ismail@bennani.ma>
2024-05-23 01:25:48 -07:00
Jason Molenda
61384850c5 Revert "[lldb] Make use of Scripted{Python,}Interface for ScriptedThreadPlan (#70392)"
Temporarily revert to unblock the CI bots, this is breaking the -DLLVM_ENABLE_MODULES=On
modules style build.  I've notified Ismail.

This reverts commit 888501bc631c4f6d373b4081ff6c504a1ce4a682.
2024-01-29 10:43:33 -08:00
Med Ismail Bennani
888501bc63 [lldb] Make use of Scripted{Python,}Interface for ScriptedThreadPlan (#70392)
This patch makes ScriptedThreadPlan conforming to the ScriptedInterface
& ScriptedPythonInterface facilities by introducing 2
ScriptedThreadPlanInterface & ScriptedThreadPlanPythonInterface classes.

This allows us to get rid of every ScriptedThreadPlan-specific SWIG
method and re-use the same affordances as other scripting offordances,
like Scripted{Process,Thread,Platform} & OperatingSystem.

To do so, this adds new transformer methods for `ThreadPlan`, `Stream` &
`Event`, to allow the bijection between C++ objects and their python
counterparts.

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <ismail@bennani.ma>
2024-01-29 03:17:33 -08:00
Med Ismail Bennani
6eafe2cb7a Revert "[lldb] Make use of Scripted{Python,}Interface for ScriptedThreadPlan (#70392)"
This reverts commit 4b3cd379cce3f455bf3c8677ca7a5be6e708a4ce since it
introduces some test failures:

https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/68/builds/62556
2023-10-30 17:40:11 -07:00
Med Ismail Bennani
4b3cd379cc
[lldb] Make use of Scripted{Python,}Interface for ScriptedThreadPlan (#70392)
This patch makes ScriptedThreadPlan conforming to the ScriptedInterface
& ScriptedPythonInterface facilities by introducing 2
ScriptedThreadPlanInterface & ScriptedThreadPlanPythonInterface classes.

This allows us to get rid of every ScriptedThreadPlan-specific SWIG
method and re-use the same affordances as other scripting offordances,
like Scripted{Process,Thread,Platform} & OperatingSystem.

To do so, this adds new transformer methods for `ThreadPlan`, `Stream` &
`Event`, to allow the bijection between C++ objects and their python
counterparts.

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <ismail@bennani.ma>
2023-10-30 16:52:17 -07:00
Kazuki Sakamoto
c4fa6fafc4 [lldb][LocateModuleCallback] Update SBFileSpec/SBModuleSpec
RFC https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-python-callback-for-target-get-module/71580

SBFileSpec and SBModuleSpec will be used for locate module callback as Python
function arguments. This diff allows these things.
- Can be instantiated from SBPlatform.
- Can be passed to/from Python.
- Can be accessed for object offset and size.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D153733
2023-07-12 11:11:18 -07:00
Alex Langford
27b6a4e63a [lldb] Mark most SBAPI methods involving private types as protected or private
Many SB classes have public constructors or methods involving types that
are private. Some are more obvious (e.g. containing lldb_private in the
name) than others (lldb::FooSP is usually std::shared_pointer<lldb_private::Foo>).

This commit explicitly does not address FileSP, so I'm leaving that one
alone for now.

Some of these were for other SB classes to use and should have been made
protected/private with a friend class entry added. Some of these were
public for some of the swig python helpers to use. I put all of those
functions into a class and made them static methods. The relevant SB
classes mark that class as a friend so they can access those
private/protected members.

I've also removed an outdated SBStructuredData test (can you guess which
constructor it was using?) and updated the other relevant tests.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150157
2023-05-10 12:36:55 -07:00
Med Ismail Bennani
f190ec6882 [lldb/Plugins] Add memory writing capabilities to Scripted Process
This patch adds memory writing capabilities to the Scripted Process plugin.

This allows to user to get a target address and a memory buffer on the
python scripted process implementation that the user can make processing
on before performing the actual write.

This will also be used to write trap instruction to a real process
memory to set a breakpoint.

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
2023-03-03 19:33:02 -08:00
Med Ismail Bennani
b9d4c94a60 [lldb/Plugins] Add Attach capabilities to ScriptedProcess
This patch adds process attach capabilities to the ScriptedProcess
plugin. This doesn't really expects a PID or process name, since the
process state is already script, however, this allows to create a
scripted process without requiring to have an executuble in the target.

In order to do so, this patch also turns the scripted process related
getters and setters from the `ProcessLaunchInfo` and
`ProcessAttachInfo` classes to a `ScriptedMetadata` instance and moves
it in the `ProcessInfo` class, so it can be accessed interchangeably.

This also adds the necessary SWIG wrappers to convert the internal
`Process{Attach,Launch}InfoSP` into a `SB{Attach,Launch}Info` to pass it
as argument the scripted process python implementation and convert it
back to the internal representation.

rdar://104577406

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143104

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
2023-03-03 19:33:02 -08:00
Med Ismail Bennani
7e01924e4e [lldb/Plugins] Improve error reporting with reading memory in Scripted Process
This patch improves the ScriptedPythonInterface::Dispatch method to
support passing lldb_private types to the python implementation.

This will allow, for instance, the Scripted Process python implementation
to report errors when reading memory back to lldb.

To do so, the Dispatch method will transform the private types in the
parameter pack into `PythonObject`s to be able to pass them down to the
python methods.

Then, if the call succeeded, the transformed arguments will be converted
back to their original type and re-assigned in the parameter pack, to
ensure pointers and references behaviours are preserved.

This patch also updates various scripted process python class and tests
to reflect this change.

rdar://100030995

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134033

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
2022-11-18 13:56:48 -08:00
Jorge Gorbe Moya
d76566417e [lldb] Add matching based on Python callbacks for data formatters.
This patch adds a new matching method for data formatters, in addition
to the existing exact typename and regex-based matching. The new method
allows users to specify the name of a Python callback function that
takes a `SBType` object and decides whether the type is a match or not.

Here is an overview of the changes performed:

- Add a new `eFormatterMatchCallback` matching type, and logic to handle
  it in `TypeMatcher` and `SBTypeNameSpecifier`.

- Extend `FormattersMatchCandidate` instances with a pointer to the
  current `ScriptInterpreter` and the `TypeImpl` corresponding to the
  candidate type, so we can run registered callbacks and pass the type
  to them. All matcher search functions now receive a
  `FormattersMatchCandidate` instead of a type name.

- Add some glue code to ScriptInterpreterPython and the SWIG bindings to
  allow calling a formatter matching callback. Most of this code is
  modeled after the equivalent code for watchpoint callback functions.

- Add an API test for the new callback-based matching feature.

For more context, please check the RFC thread where this feature was
originally discussed:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-python-callback-for-data-formatters-type-matching/64204/11

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135648
2022-10-19 12:53:38 -07:00
Pavel Labath
0a07c9662e [lldb/python] Fix dangling Event and CommandReturnObject references
Unlike the rest of our SB objects, SBEvent and SBCommandReturnObject
have the ability to hold non-owning pointers to their non-SB
counterparts. This makes it hard to ensure the SB objects do not become
dangling once their backing object goes away.

While we could make these two objects behave like others, that would
require plubming even more shared pointers through our internal code
(Event objects are mostly prepared for it, CommandReturnObject are not).
Doing so seems unnecessarily disruptive, given that (unlike for some of
the other objects) I don't see any good reason why would someone want to
hold onto these objects after the function terminates.

For that reason, this patch implements a different approach -- the SB
objects will still hold non-owning pointers, but they will be reset to
the empty/default state as soon as the function terminates. This python
code will not crash if the user decides to store these objects -- but
the objects themselves will be useless/empty.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116162
2022-01-04 14:49:00 +01:00
Pavel Labath
2efc6892d8 [lldb/python] Avoid more dangling pointers in python glue code 2021-12-22 13:47:06 +01:00
Pavel Labath
7406d236d8 [lldb/python] Fix (some) dangling pointers in our glue code
This starts to fix the other half of the lifetime problems in this code
-- dangling references. SB objects created on the stack will go away
when the function returns, which is a problem if the python code they
were meant for stashes a reference to them somewhere.  Most of the time
this goes by unnoticed, as the code rarely has a reason to store these,
but in case it does, we shouldn't respond by crashing.

This patch fixes the management for a couple of SB objects (Debugger,
Frame, Thread). The SB objects are now created on the heap, and
their ownership is immediately passed on to SWIG, which will ensure they
are destroyed when the last python reference goes away. I will handle
the other objects in separate patches.

I include one test which demonstrates the lifetime issue for SBDebugger.
Strictly speaking, one should create a test case for each of these
objects and each of the contexts they are being used. That would require
figuring out how to persist (and later access) each of these objects.
Some of those may involve a lot of hoop-jumping (we can run python code
from within a frame-format string). I don't think that is
necessary/worth it since the new wrapper functions make it very hard to
get this wrong.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115925
2021-12-20 09:42:08 +01:00
Pavel Labath
ebb6bb725e [lldb/python] Plug SBStructuredData leaks
This applies the from D114259 to the SBStructuredData class.
2021-12-14 17:02:24 +01:00
Pavel Labath
7f09ab08de [lldb] Fix [some] leaks in python bindings
Using an lldb_private object in the bindings involves three steps
- wrapping the object in it's lldb::SB variant
- using swig to convert/wrap that to a PyObject
- wrapping *that* in a lldb_private::python::PythonObject

Our SBTypeToSWIGWrapper was only handling the middle part. This doesn't
just result in increased boilerplate in the callers, but is also a
functionality problem, as it's very hard to get the lifetime of of all
of these objects right. Most of the callers are creating the SB object
(step 1) on the stack, which means that we end up with dangling python
objects after the function terminates. Most of the time this isn't a
problem, because the python code does not need to persist the objects.
However, there are legitimate cases where they can do it (and even if
the use case is not completely legitimate, crashing is not the best
response to that).

For this reason, some of our code creates the SB object on the heap, but
it has another problem -- it never gets cleaned up.

This patch begins to add a new function (ToSWIGWrapper), which does all
of the three steps, while properly taking care of ownership. In the
first step, I have converted most of the leaky code (except for
SBStructuredData, which needs a bit more work).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114259
2021-11-22 15:14:52 +01:00
Pavel Labath
f1127914d3 [lldb] Deobfuscate python-swigsafecast.swig
This file was way more complicated than it needed to be.

This patch removes the automagic reference-to-pointer delegation and
replaces the template specializations with regular free functions
(taking reference arguments).

The reason I chose references is twofold:
- there are more arguments being passed by reference than by pointer
- the reference arguments make it more obvious that there is a lot of
  leaking going on in there.

Currently, the code was assuming that the pointer arguments have some
kind of a special meaning and that pointer functions take ownership of
their arguments, which isn't true (it's possible it was true at some
point in the past, I haven't done the archeology).

This makes it easier to implement proper lifetime management in
follow-up patches.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114150
2021-11-18 19:27:09 +01:00
Jim Ingham
1b1d981598 Revert "Revert "Add the ability to write target stop-hooks using the ScriptInterpreter.""
This reverts commit f775fe59640a2e837ad059a8f40e26989d4f9831.

I fixed a return type error in the original patch that was causing a test failure.
Also added a REQUIRES: python to the shell test so we'll skip this for
people who build lldb w/o Python.
Also added another test for the error printing.
2020-09-29 12:01:14 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
f775fe5964 Revert "Add the ability to write target stop-hooks using the ScriptInterpreter."
This temporarily reverts commit b65966cff65bfb66de59621347ffd97238d3f645
while Jim figures out why the test is failing on the bots.
2020-09-28 09:04:32 -07:00
Jim Ingham
b65966cff6 Add the ability to write target stop-hooks using the ScriptInterpreter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88123
2020-09-25 15:44:55 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
6498aff249 [lldb/Bindings] Move bindings into their own subdirectory
All the code required to generate the language bindings for Python and
Lua lives under scripts, even though the majority of this code aren't
scripts at all, and surrounded by scripts that are totally unrelated.

I've reorganized these files and moved everything related to the
language bindings into a new top-level directory named bindings. This
makes the corresponding files self contained and much more discoverable.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72437
2020-01-09 08:44:34 -08:00