Recently https://reviews.llvm.org/D88103 introduced a nice API for
converting a JSON object into C++ types, which include nice error
messaging.
I'm using that new functioniality to perform the parsing in a much more
elegant way. As a result, the code looks simpler and more maintainable,
as we aren't parsing anymore individual fields manually.
I updated the test cases accordingly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88264
When the various methods of locating the module in GetRemoteSharedModule
fail, make sure we pass the original module spec to the bail-out call to
the provided resolver function.
Also make sure we consistently use the resolved module spec from the
various success paths.
Thanks to what appears to have been an accidentally inverted condition
(commit 85967fa applied the new condition to a path where GetModuleSpec
returns false, but should have applied it when GetModuleSpec returns
true), without this fix we only pass the original module spec in the
fallback if the original spec has no uuid (or has a uuid that somehow
matches the resolved module's uuid despite the call to GetModuleSpec
failing). This manifested as a bug when processing a minidump file with
a user-provided sysroot, since in that case the resolver call was being
applied to resolved_module_spec (despite resolution failing), which did
not have the path of its file_spec set.
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88099
This is the first in a series of patches that will adds a new processor trace plug-in to LLDB.
The idea for this first patch to to add the plug-in interface with simple commands for the trace files that can "load" and "dump" the trace information. We can test the functionality and ensure people are happy with the way things are done and how things are organized before moving on to adding more functionality.
Processor trace information can be view in a few different ways:
- post mortem where a trace is saved off that can be viewed later in the debugger
- gathered while a process is running and allow the user to step back in time (with no variables, memory or registers) to see how each thread arrived at where it is currently stopped.
This patch attempts to start with the first solution of loading a trace file after the fact. The idea is that we will use a JSON file to load the trace information. JSON allows us to specify information about the trace like:
- plug-in name in LLDB
- path to trace file
- shared library load information so we can re-create a target and symbolicate the information in the trace
- any other info that the trace plug-in will need to be able to successfully parse the trace information
- cpu type
- version info
- ???
A new "trace" command was added at the top level of the LLDB commmands:
- "trace load"
- "trace dump"
I did this because if we load trace information we don't need to have a process and we might end up creating a new target for the trace information that will become active. If anyone has any input on where this would be better suited, please let me know. Walter Erquinigo will end up filling in the Intel PT specific plug-in so that it works and is tested once we can agree that the direction of this patch is the correct one, so please feel free to chime in with ideas on comments!
Reviewed By: clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85705
This patch adds the ability to use a custom interpreter with the
`platform shell` command. If the user set the `-s|--shell` option
with the path to a binary, lldb passes it down to the platform's
`RunShellProcess` method and set it as the shell to use in
`ProcessLaunchInfo to run commands.
Note that not all the Platforms support running shell commands with
custom interpreters (i.e. RemoteGDBServer is only expected to use the
default shell).
This patch also makes some refactoring and cleanups, like swapping
CString for StringRef when possible and updating `SBPlatformShellCommand`
with new methods and a new constructor.
rdar://67759256
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86667
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
When `Target::GetEntryPointAddress()` calls `exe_module->GetObjectFile()->GetEntryPointAddress()`, and the returned
`entry_addr` is valid, it can immediately be returned.
However, just before that, an `llvm::Error` value has been setup, but in this case it is not consumed before returning, like is done further below in the function.
In https://bugs.freebsd.org/248745 we got a bug report for this, where a very simple test case aborts and dumps core:
```
* thread #1, name = 'testcase', stop reason = breakpoint 1.1
frame #0: 0x00000000002018d4 testcase`main(argc=1, argv=0x00007fffffffea18) at testcase.c:3:5
1 int main(int argc, char *argv[])
2 {
-> 3 return 0;
4 }
(lldb) p argc
Program aborted due to an unhandled Error:
Error value was Success. (Note: Success values must still be checked prior to being destroyed).
Thread 1 received signal SIGABRT, Aborted.
thr_kill () at thr_kill.S:3
3 thr_kill.S: No such file or directory.
(gdb) bt
#0 thr_kill () at thr_kill.S:3
#1 0x00000008049a0004 in __raise (s=6) at /usr/src/lib/libc/gen/raise.c:52
#2 0x0000000804916229 in abort () at /usr/src/lib/libc/stdlib/abort.c:67
#3 0x000000000451b5f5 in fatalUncheckedError () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Support/Error.cpp:112
#4 0x00000000019cf008 in GetEntryPointAddress () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/Error.h:267
#5 0x0000000001bccbd8 in ConstructorSetup () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Target/ThreadPlanCallFunction.cpp:67
#6 0x0000000001bcd2c0 in ThreadPlanCallFunction () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Target/ThreadPlanCallFunction.cpp:114
#7 0x00000000020076d4 in InferiorCallMmap () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Plugins/Process/Utility/InferiorCallPOSIX.cpp:97
#8 0x0000000001f4be33 in DoAllocateMemory () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Plugins/Process/FreeBSD/ProcessFreeBSD.cpp:604
#9 0x0000000001fe51b9 in AllocatePage () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Target/Memory.cpp:347
#10 0x0000000001fe5385 in AllocateMemory () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Target/Memory.cpp:383
#11 0x0000000001974da2 in AllocateMemory () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Target/Process.cpp:2301
#12 CanJIT () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Target/Process.cpp:2331
#13 0x0000000001a1bf3d in Evaluate () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Expression/UserExpression.cpp:190
#14 0x00000000019ce7a2 in EvaluateExpression () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Target/Target.cpp:2372
#15 0x0000000001ad784c in EvaluateExpression () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Commands/CommandObjectExpression.cpp:414
#16 0x0000000001ad86ae in DoExecute () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Commands/CommandObjectExpression.cpp:646
#17 0x0000000001a5e3ed in Execute () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Interpreter/CommandObject.cpp:1003
#18 0x0000000001a6c4a3 in HandleCommand () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Interpreter/CommandInterpreter.cpp:1762
#19 0x0000000001a6f98c in IOHandlerInputComplete () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Interpreter/CommandInterpreter.cpp:2760
#20 0x0000000001a90b08 in Run () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Core/IOHandler.cpp:548
#21 0x00000000019a6c6a in ExecuteIOHandlers () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Core/Debugger.cpp:903
#22 0x0000000001a70337 in RunCommandInterpreter () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/Interpreter/CommandInterpreter.cpp:2946
#23 0x0000000001d9d812 in RunCommandInterpreter () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/source/API/SBDebugger.cpp:1169
#24 0x0000000001918be8 in MainLoop () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/tools/driver/Driver.cpp:675
#25 0x000000000191a114 in main () at /usr/src/contrib/llvm-project/lldb/tools/driver/Driver.cpp:890```
Fix the incorrect error catch by only instantiating an `Error` object if it is necessary.
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86355
Provider a wrapper around llvm::sys::path::home_directory in the
FileSystem class. This will make it possible for the reproducers to
intercept the call in a central place.
Dedicated completion for the command `thread plan discard` with a corresponding
test case.
Reviewed By: teemperor
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83234
with how it is done for a lean binary
In particular this affects how target create --arch is handled — it
allowed us to override the deployment target (a useful feature for the
expression evaluator), but the fat binary case didn't.
rdar://problem/66024437
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85049
(cherry picked from commit 470bdd3caaab0b6e0ffed4da304244be40b78668)
Add an option that allows the user to decide to not make the inferior is
responsible for its own TCC permissions. If you don't make the inferior
responsible, it inherits the permissions of its parent. The motivation
is the scenario of running the LLDB test suite from an external hard
drive. If the inferior is responsible, every test needs to be granted
access to the external volume. When the permissions are inherited,
approval needs to be granted only once.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85237
On Hexagon, breakpoints need to be on the first instruction of a packet.
When the LLVM disassembler for Hexagon returned 32 bit instructions, we
needed code to find the start of the current packet. Now that the LLVM
disassembler for Hexagon returns packets instead of instructions, we always
have the first instruction of the packet. Remove the packet traversal code
because it can cause problems when the next packet has more than one
instruction.
Reviewed By: clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84966
Let's just return a std::string to make this safe. formatv seemed overkill for formatting
the return values as they all just append an integer value to a constant string.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84505
Currently, `target create` has no --platform option. However,
TargetList::CreateTargetInternal which is called under the hood, will
return an error when either no platform or multiple matching platforms
are found, saying that a platform should be specified with --platform.
This patch adds the platform option, but that doesn't solve either of
these errors.
- If more than one platform matches, specifying the platform isn't
going to fix that. The current code will only look at the
architecture instead. I've updated the error message to ask the user
to specify an architecture.
- If no architecture is found, specifying a new one via platform isn't
going to change that either because we already try to find one that
matches the given architecture.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84809
This cleanup patch unifies all methods called GetByteSize() in the
ValueObject hierarchy to return an optional, like the methods in
CompilerType do. This means fewer magic 0 values, which could fix bugs
down the road in languages where types can have a size of zero, such
as Swift and C (but not C++).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84285
This re-lands the patch with bogus :m_byte_size(0) initalizations removed.
This cleanup patch unifies all methods called GetByteSize() in the
ValueObject hierarchy to return an optional, like the methods in
CompilerType do. This means fewer magic 0 values, which could fix bugs
down the road in languages where types can have a size of zero, such
as Swift and C (but not C++).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84285
When a process is notified that modules got loaded, currently only
existing language runtimes are given a chance to deal with that. This
means that if the runtime for a given language wasn't needed before it
won't be informed of the module chance.
This is wrong because the module change might be what triggers the need
for a certain runtime. Instead, we should give the language runtime for
every supported language a chance to deal with the modified modules.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84475
Summary:
Frame recognizers are stored alongside a flag that indicates whether they were
deleted by the user. If the flag is set, they are supposed to be ignored by the
rest of the frame recognizer code. 'frame recognizer delete' is supposed to set
that flag. 'frame recognizer clear' however actually deletes all frame
recognizers (so, it doesn't set the flag but directly deletes them from the
list).
The current implementation of this concept is pretty broken. `frame recognizer
delete` sets the flag, but it somehow thinks that the recognizer id is an index
in the recognizer list. That's not true as it's actually just a member of each
recognizer entry. So it actually just sets the `deleted` flag for a random other
recognizer. The tests for the recognizer still pass as `frame recognizer list`
is also broken and just completely ignored the `deleted` flag and lists all
recognizers. Also `frame recognizer delete` just ignores if it can't actually
delete a recognizer if the id is invalid.
I think we can simplify this whole thing by just actually deleting recognizers
instead of making sure all code is actually respecting the `deleted` flag. I
assume the intention of this was to make sure that all recognizers are getting
unique ids over the course of an LLDB session, but as `clear` is actually
deleting them and we keep recycling ids, that didn't really work to begin with.
This patch deletes the `deleted` flag and just actually deletes the stored
recognizer. Also adds the missing error message in case it find a recognizer
with a given id.
Reviewers: mib
Reviewed By: mib
Subscribers: abidh, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84404
Summary:
Currently the frame recognizers are stored in a global list (the list in the
StackFrameRecognizersManagerImpl singleton to be precise). All commands and
plugins that modify the list are just modifying that global list of recognizers
which is shared by all Target and Debugger instances.
This is clearly against the idea of LLDB being usable as a library and it also
leads to some very obscure errors as now multiple tests are sharing the used
frame recognizers. For example D83400 is currently failing as it reorders some
test_ functions which permanently changes the frame recognizers of all
debuggers/targets. As all frame recognizers are also initialized in a 'once'
guard, it's also impossible to every restore back the original frame recognizers
once they are deleted in a process.
This patch just moves the frame recognizers into the current target. This seems
the way everyone assumes the system works as for example the assert frame
recognizers is using the current target to find the function/so-name to look for
(which only works if the recognizers are stored in the target).
Reviewers: jingham, mib
Reviewed By: jingham, mib
Subscribers: MrHate, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83757
In synchronous mode, the process connect command and its aliases should
wait for the stop event before claiming the command is complete.
Currently, the stop event is always handled asynchronously by the
debugger.
The implementation takes the same approach as Process::ResumeSynchronous
which hijacks the event and handles it on the current thread. Similarly,
after this patch, the stop event is part of the command return object,
which is the property used by the test case.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83728
Summary:
This patch aims to remove multiple copies of GetByteOrder() and ConvertRegisterKindToRegisterNumber used in various versions of RegisterContextPOSIX_*.
Both register implementations are move to RegisterContext class which is parent of RegisterContextPOSIX_* classes.
Built and tested on x86_64-linux-gnu, aarch64-linux-gnu and arm-linux-gnueabihf targets.
Reviewers: labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: wuzish, nemanjai, kristof.beyls, kbarton, atanasyan, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80104
Encountered the following situation: Let we started thread T1 and it hit
breakpoint on B1 location. We suspended T1 and continued the process.
Then we started thread T2 which hit for example the same location B1.
This time in a breakpoint callback we decided not to stop returning
false.
Expected result: process continues (as if T2 did not hit breakpoint) its
workflow with T1 still suspended. Actual result: process do stops (as if
T2 callback returned true).
Solution: We need invalidate StopInfo for threads that was previously
suspended just because something that is already inactive can not be the
reason of stop. Thread::GetPrivateStopInfo() may be appropriate place to
do it, because it gets called (through Thread::GetStopInfo()) every time
before process reports stop and user gets chance to change
m_resume_state again i.e if we see m_resume_state == eStateSuspended
it definitely means it was set during previous stop and it also means
this thread can not be stopped again (cos' it was frozen during
previous stop).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80112
Color the error: and warning: part of the CommandReturnObject output,
similar to how an error is printed from the driver when colors are
enabled.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81058
Summary:
The way that the support for the GNU dialect of tail call frames was
implemented in D80519 meant that the were reporting very bogus PC values
which pointed into the middle of an instruction: the -1 trick is
necessary for the address to resolve to the right function, but we
should still be reporting a more realistic PC value -- I say "realistic"
and not "real", because it's very debatable what should be the correct
PC value for frames like this.
This patch achieves that my moving the -1 from SymbolFileDWARF into the
stack frame computation code. The idea is that SymbolFileDWARF will
merely report whether it has provided an address of the instruction
after the tail call, or the address of the call instruction itself. The
StackFrameList machinery uses this information to set the "behaves like
frame zero" property of the artificial frames (the main thing this flag
does is it controls the -1 subtraction when looking up the function
address).
This required a moderate refactor of the CallEdge class, because it was
implicitly assuming that edges pointing after the call were real calls
and those pointing the the call insn were tail calls. The class now
carries this information explicitly -- it carries three mostly
independent pieces of information:
- an address of interest in the caller
- a bit saying whether this address points to the call insn or after it
- whether this is a tail call
Reviewers: vsk, dblaikie
Subscribers: aprantl, mgrang, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81010
This patchs adds an optional warning that is printed when stopped at a
frame that was compiled in a source language that LLDB has no plugin
for.
The motivational use-case is debugging Swift code on Linux. When the
user accidentally invokes the system LLDB that was built without the
Swift plugin, it is very much non-obvious why debugging doesnt
work. This warning makes it easy to figure out what went wrong.
<rdar://problem/56986569>
Summary:
In our project we are using remote client-server LLDB configuration.
We want to parse as much debugging symbols as we can before debugger starts attachment to the remote process.
To do that we are passing the path of the local executable module to CreateTarget method at the client.
But, it seems that this method are not parsing the executable module symbols.
To fix this I added PreloadSymbols call for executable module to target creation method.
This patch also fixes a problem where the DynamicLoader would reset a
module when launching the target. We fix it by making sure
Platform::ResolveExecutable returns the module object obtained from the
remote platform.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78654