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
The condition detection code is calculating the result of the condition
based on the first 3 bit of the condition and then negate it if the LSB
of the condition is set. It works for the normal conditions but 0b1110
and 0b1111 are special as both of them should evaluate to true
independently the value of CPSR. This CL removes the negating logic from
those cases.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9219
llvm-svn: 235715
In the previous ordering some "blx <label>" instruction was recognised
as "b #imm24" instructions causing a failure in the instruction
emulator.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9218
llvm-svn: 235714
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
Write the new cpsr value into the cpsr register if the BL or the BLX
instruction change the instruction set on arm.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9188
llvm-svn: 235585
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
module-loading support for the expression parser.
- It adds support for auto-loading modules referred
to by a compile unit. These references are
currently in the form of empty translation units.
This functionality is gated by the setting
target.auto-import-clang-modules (boolean) = false
- It improves and corrects support for loading
macros from modules, currently by textually
pasting all #defines into the user's expression.
The improvements center around including only those
modules that are relevant to the current context -
hand-loaded modules and the modules that are imported
from the current compile unit.
- It adds an "opt-in" mechanism for all of this
functionality. Modules have to be explicitly
imported (via @import) or auto-loaded (by enabling
the above setting) to enable any of this
functionality.
It also adds support to the compile unit and symbol
file code to deal with empty translation units that
indicate module imports, and plumbs this through to
the CompileUnit interface.
Finally, it makes the following changes to the test
suite:
- It adds a testcase that verifies that modules are
automatically loaded when the appropriate setting
is enabled (lang/objc/modules-auto-import); and
- It modifies lanb/objc/modules-incomplete to test
the case where a module #undefs something that is
#defined in another module.
<rdar://problem/20299554>
llvm-svn: 235313
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 debug info section contains some $d mapping symbol what is
overlapping with code sections in other sections of the object file
causing problem in the address class detection. This CL ignores these
symboles from the address class map as the debug info sections don't use
this map.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9050
llvm-svn: 235171
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
virtual void
LanguageRuntime::ModulesDidLoad (const ModuleList &module_list);
Then reorganized how the objective C plug-in is notified so it will work for all LanguageRuntime subclasses.
llvm-svn: 235118
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
Summary: This will get the windows bots going.
Test Plan: Build LLDB on Windows.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8934
llvm-svn: 234527