The old way of lldb reading the on-disk shared cache is still in
the sources, but we use dyld SPI to inspect this binary now. This
code is no longer called.
The sanity check on the size of the register context we found in
the corefile was off by one, so lldb would not add the register
contents. Add a test case to ensure it doesn't regress.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D149224
rdar://108306070
We have a handful of places in LLDB where we try to outsmart the logic
in Mangled to determine whether a string is mangled or not. There's at
least one place (*) where we are getting this wrong and causes a subtle
bug. The `cstring_is_mangled` is cheap enough that we should always rely
on it to determine whether a string is mangled or not.
(*) `ObjectFileMachO` assumes that a symbol that starts with a double
underscore (such as `__pthread_kill`) is mangled. That's mostly
harmless, until you use `function.name-without-args` in the frame
format. The formatter calls `Symbol::GetNameNoArguments()` which is a
wrapper around `Mangled::GetName(ePreferDemangledWithoutArguments)`. The
latter will first try using the appropriate language plugin to get the
demangled name without arguments, and if that fails, falls back to
returning the demangled name. Because we forced Mangled to treat the
symbol as a mangled name (even though it's not) there's no demangled
name. The result is that frames don't show any symbol at all.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148846
When ObjectFileMachO::LoadCoreFileImages load a binary into the
target with a valid load address, we don't need to re-load its
segments into the Target's SectionLoadList again. But we should
still call ModulesDidLoad on these modules so breakpoints can be
inserted etc.
Follow Alex Langford's feedback to my patch from
https://reviews.llvm.org/D145547 , and fix a
side issue I noticed while testing this, where
binaries loaded via LC_NOTE metadata were loaded
in the Target twice unnecessarily.
We have some non-kexts in the binary list in the Darwin kernel
in some situations. The binary has likely already been loaded;
check if it has been, and don't re-load it. Also, if we do need
to load it at this point, if in-memory segment vmaddrs have not
been updated to the actual load addresses, calculate a fixed slide
for the in-memory image and apply that slide to the ondisk binary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D145547
rdar://106343477
I recently came across a binary that for some reason had overlapping
sections. When debugging it, LLDB was able to get information about one
of the sections but not the other because SectionLoadList assumes that
each address maps to exactly one section. We have the capability to warn
about this, but it was not turned on.
rdar://105751700
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D144528
Limit trusting the arange accelerator tables (8b259fe573e1) to dSYMs
only, and not any debug info object file.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141330
In preparation for eanbling 64bit support in LLDB switching to use llvm::formatv
instead of format MACROs.
Reviewed By: labath, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139955
std::optional::value() has undesired exception checking semantics and is
unavailable in some older Xcode. The call sites block std::optional migration.
Add support for recognizing a platform binary in the ObjectFileMachO
method that parses the "load binary" LC_NOTEs in a corefile.
A bit of reorganization to ProcessMachCore::DoLoadCore to separate
all of the unrelated things being done in that method into their own
separate methods, as well as small fixes to improve the handling of
a corefile with multiple kernel images in the corefile.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133680
rdar://98754861
Previously, depending on how you constructed a UUID from data or a
StringRef, an input value of all zeros was valid (e.g. setFromData)
or not (e.g. setFromOptionalData). Since there was no way to tell
which interpretation to use, it was done somewhat inconsistently.
This standardizes the meaning of a UUID of all zeros to Not Valid,
and removes all the Optional methods and their uses, as well as the
static factories that supported them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132191
This patch teaches LLDB about Mach-O filesets. Filsets are Mach-O files
that contain a bunch of other Mach-O files. Unlike universal binaries,
which have a different header, Filesets use load commands to describe
the different entries it contains.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132433
Suppress coverity false positives.
This diff contains comments only, including the hints for Coverity static code inspection
to suppress the warning originating at the next line after the comment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131998
Static code inspection guided fixes for the following issues:
- dead code
- buffer not null-terminated
- null-dereference
- out-of-bounds access
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131554
Add support to Mach-O corefiles and to live gdb remote serial protocol
connections for the corefile/remote stub to provide a list of load
addresses of binaries that should be found & loaded by lldb, and nothing
else. lldb will try to parse the binary out of memory, and if it can
find a UUID, try to find a binary & its debug information based on the
UUID, falling back to using the memory image if it must.
A bit of code unification from three parts of lldb that were loading
individual binaries already, so there is a shared method in
DynamicLoader to handle all of the variations they were doing.
Re-landing this with a uuid_is_null() implementation added to
Utility/UuidCompatibility.h for non-Darwin systems.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130813
rdar://94249937
rdar://94249384
This reverts commit d8879fba8825b9799166ba0ea552d4027bfb8ad1.
Debian bot failure; I included <uuid/uuid.h> to get uuid_is_null() but
don't get it there. Will memcmp or whatever & recommit.
Add support to Mach-O corefiles and to live gdb remote serial protocol
connections for the corefile/remote stub to provide a list of load
addresses of binaries that should be found & loaded by lldb, and nothing
else. lldb will try to parse the binary out of memory, and if it can
find a UUID, try to find a binary & its debug information based on the
UUID, falling back to using the memory image if it must.
A bit of code unification from three parts of lldb that were loading
individual binaries already, so there is a shared method in
DynamicLoader to handle all of the variations they were doing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130813
rdar://94249937
rdar://94249384
Resubmission of https://reviews.llvm.org/D130309 with the 2 patches that fixed the linux buildbot, and new windows fixes.
The FileSpec APIs allow users to modify instance variables directly by getting a non const reference to the directory and filename instance variables. This makes it impossible to control all of the times the FileSpec object is modified so we can clear cached member variables like m_resolved and with an upcoming patch caching if the file is relative or absolute. This patch modifies the APIs of FileSpec so no one can modify the directory or filename instance variables directly by adding set accessors and by removing the get accessors that are non const.
Many clients were using FileSpec::GetCString(...) which returned a unique C string from a ConstString'ified version of the result of GetPath() which returned a std::string. This caused many locations to use this convenient function incorrectly and could cause many strings to be added to the constant string pool that didn't need to. Most clients were converted to using FileSpec::GetPath().c_str() when possible. Other clients were modified to use the newly renamed version of this function which returns an actualy ConstString:
ConstString FileSpec::GetPathAsConstString(bool denormalize = true) const;
This avoids the issue where people were getting an already uniqued "const char *" that came from a ConstString only to put the "const char *" back into a "ConstString" object. By returning the ConstString instead of a "const char *" clients can be more efficient with the result.
The patch:
- Removes the non const GetDirectory() and GetFilename() get accessors
- Adds set accessors to replace the above functions: SetDirectory() and SetFilename().
- Adds ClearDirectory() and ClearFilename() to replace usage of the FileSpec::GetDirectory().Clear()/FileSpec::GetFilename().Clear() call sites
- Fixed all incorrect usage of FileSpec::GetCString() to use FileSpec::GetPath().c_str() where appropriate, and updated other call sites that wanted a ConstString to use the newly returned ConstString appropriately and efficiently.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130549
This reverts commit 9429b67b8e300e638d7828bbcb95585f85c4df4d.
It broke the build on Windows, see comments on https://reviews.llvm.org/D130309
It also reverts these follow-ups:
Revert "Fix buildbot breakage after https://reviews.llvm.org/D130309."
This reverts commit f959d815f4637890ebbacca379f1c38ab47e4e14.
Revert "Fix buildbot breakage after https://reviews.llvm.org/D130309."
This reverts commit 0bbce7a4c2d2bff622bdadd4323f93f5d90e6d24.
Revert "Cache the value for absolute path in FileSpec."
This reverts commit dabe877248b85b34878e75d5510339325ee087d0.
The FileSpect APIs allow users to modify instance variables directly by getting a non const reference to the directory and filename instance variables. This makes it impossibly to control all of the times the FileSpec object is modified so we can clear the cache. This patch modifies the APIs of FileSpec so no one can modify the directory or filename directly by adding set accessors and by removing the get accessors that are non const.
Many clients were using FileSpec::GetCString(...) which returned a unique C string from a ConstString'ified version of the result of GetPath() which returned a std::string. This caused many locations to use this convenient function incorrectly and could cause many strings to be added to the constant string pool that didn't need to. Most clients were converted to using FileSpec::GetPath().c_str() when possible. Other clients were modified to use the newly renamed version of this function which returns an actualy ConstString:
ConstString FileSpec::GetPathAsConstString(bool denormalize = true) const;
This avoids the issue where people were getting an already uniqued "const char *" that came from a ConstString only to put the "const char *" back into a "ConstString" object. By returning the ConstString instead of a "const char *" clients can be more efficient with the result.
The patch:
- Removes the non const GetDirectory() and GetFilename() get accessors
- Adds set accessors to replace the above functions: SetDirectory() and SetFilename().
- Adds ClearDirectory() and ClearFilename() to replace usage of the FileSpec::GetDirectory().Clear()/FileSpec::GetFilename().Clear() call sites
- Fixed all incorrect usage of FileSpec::GetCString() to use FileSpec::GetPath().c_str() where appropriate, and updated other call sites that wanted a ConstString to use the newly returned ConstString appropriately and efficiently.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130309
As it exists today, Host::SystemLog is used exclusively for error
reporting. With the introduction of diagnostic events, we have a better
way of reporting those. Instead of printing directly to stderr, these
messages now get printed to the debugger's error stream (when using the
default event handler). Alternatively, if someone is listening for these
events, they can decide how to display them, for example in the context
of an IDE such as Xcode.
This change also means we no longer write these messages to the system
log on Darwin. As far as I know, nobody is relying on this, but I think
this is something we could add to the diagnostic event mechanism.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128480
This reverts commit af969141fa285157044e34fb6b27963c3278241b because it
didn't have the intended performance benefit to offset the increase in
our (virtual) memory usage.
The current design allows that the object file contents could be mapped
by one object file plugin and then used by another. Presumably the idea
here was to avoid mapping the same file twice.
This becomes an issue when one object file plugin wants to map the file
differently from the others. For example, ObjectFileELF needs to map its
memory as writable while others likeObjectFileMachO needs it to be
mapped read-only.
This patch prevents plugins from changing the buffer by passing them is
by value rather than by reference.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122944
The current code increment the indirect symbol offset with the LINKEDIT
slide every time ObjectFileMachO::ParseSymtab is called.
This resulted in a crash when calling add-dsym which causes us to
potentially re-parse the original binary's symbol table. There's a
separate question about whether we should re-parse the symbol table at
all which was fixed by D114288. Regardless, copying the load command is
cheap enough that this is still the right thing to do.
rdar://72337717
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122349
Fix the log and progress report message for in-memory binaries. If
there's no object file, use the name from the Module. With this patch we
correctly show the library name when attaching to a remote process
without an expanded shared cache.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122177
ObjectFileMachO, for a couple of special binaries at the initial
launch, needs to find segment load addresses before the Target's
SectionLoadList has been initialized. The calculation to find
the first segment, which is at the same address as the mach header,
was not correct if the binary was in the Darwin shared cache.
Update the logic to handle that case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119602
rdar://88802629
Most of our code was including Log.h even though that is not where the
"lldb" log channel is defined (Log.h defines the generic logging
infrastructure). This worked because Log.h included Logging.h, even
though it should.
After the recent refactor, it became impossible the two files include
each other in this direction (the opposite inclusion is needed), so this
patch removes the workaround that was put in place and cleans up all
files to include the right thing. It also renames the file to LLDBLog to
better reflect its purpose.
This is a re-submission of 24d240558811604354a8d6080405f6bad8d15b5c
without the hunks in HostNativeThreadBase.{h,cpp}, which break builds
on Windows.
Identified with modernize-use-nullptr.
This reverts commit 913457acf07be7f22d71ac41ad1076517d7f45c6.
It again broke builds on Windows:
lldb/source/Host/common/HostNativeThreadBase.cpp(37,14): error:
assigning to 'lldb::thread_result_t' (aka 'unsigned int') from
incompatible type 'std::nullptr_t'