This patch tries to address an interoperability issue when writing
python string into the process memory.
Since the python string is not null-terminated, it would still be
written to memory however, when trying to read it again with
`SBProcess::ReadCStringFromMemory`, the memory read would fail, since
the read string doens't contain a null-terminator, and therefore is not
a valid C string.
To address that, this patch extends the `SBProcess` SWIG interface to
expose a new `WriteMemoryAsCString` method that is only exposed to the
SWIG target language. That method checks that the buffer to write is
null-terminated and otherwise, it appends a null byte at the end of it.
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
Instead of maintaining separate swig interface files, we can use the API
headers directly. They implement the exact same C++ APIs and we can
conditionally include the python extensions as needed. To remove the
swig extensions from the API headers when building the LLDB
framework, we can use the unifdef tool when it is available. Otherwise
we just copy them as-is.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D142926