Expose diagnostic events through the SB API. Unlike the progress events,
I opted to use a SBStructuredData so that we can add fields in the
future.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121818
This patch is another attempt to fix platform selection on Apple
Silicon. It partially undoes D117340 which tried to fix the issue by
always instantiating a remote-ios platform for "iPhone and iPad Apps on
Apple Silicon Macs".
While the previous patch worked for attaching, it broke launching and
everything else that expects the remote platform to be connected. I made
an attempt to work around that, but quickly found out that there were
just too may places that had this assumption baked in.
This patch takes a different approach and reverts back to marking the
host platform compatible with iOS triples. This brings us back to the
original situation where platform selection was broken for remote iOS
debugging on Apple Silicon. To fix that, we now look at the process'
host architecture to differentiate between iOS binaries running remotely
and iOS binaries running locally.
I tested the following scenarios, which now all uses the desired
platform:
- Launching an iOS binary on macOS: uses the host platform
- Attaching to an iOS binary on macOS: uses the host platform
- Attaching to a remote iOS binary: uses the remote-ios platform
rdar://89840215
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121444
They don't require that the memory return address be restored prior to
function exit, so there's no guarantee the value is correct. It's better
to return nothing that something that's not accurate.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121348
This clarifies that this is an LLVM specific variable and avoids
potential conflicts with other projects.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119918
This patch ensures that lldb can automatically load a scripted process
blueprint from a dSYM bundle and launch a scripted process with it.
rdar://74502750
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121316
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
Add `IsAggregateType` to the SB API.
I'd like to use this from tests, and there are numerous other `Is<X>Type`
predicates on `SBType`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121252
This patch moves the platform creation and selection logic into the
per-debugger platform lists. I've tried to keep functional changes to a
minimum -- the main (only) observable difference in this change is that
APIs, which select a platform by name (e.g.,
Debugger::SetCurrentPlatform) will not automatically pick up a platform
associated with another debugger (or no debugger at all).
I've also added several tests for this functionality -- one of the
pleasant consequences of the debugger isolation is that it is now
possible to test the platform selection and creation logic.
This is a product of the discussion at
<https://discourse.llvm.org/t/multiple-platforms-with-the-same-name/59594>.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120810
Embedded nul characters are still printed, and they don't terminate the
string. See also D111634.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120803
Our SIGTSTP handler was working, but that was mostly accidental.
The reason it worked is because lldb is multithreaded for most of its
lifetime and the OS is reasonably fast at responding to signals. So,
what happened was that the kill(SIGTSTP) which we sent from inside the
handler was delivered to another thread while the handler was still set
to SIG_DFL (which then correctly put the entire process to sleep).
Sometimes it happened that the other thread got the second signal after
the first thread had already restored the handler, in which case the
signal handler would run again, and it would again attempt to send the
SIGTSTP signal back to itself.
Normally it didn't take many iterations for the signal to be delivered
quickly enough. However, if you were unlucky (or were playing around
with pexpect) you could get SIGTSTP while lldb was single-threaded, and
in that case, lldb would go into an endless loop because the second
SIGTSTP could only be handled on the main thread, and only after the
handler for the first signal returned (and re-installed itself). In that
situation the handler would keep re-sending the signal to itself.
This patch fixes the issue by implementing the handler the way it
supposed to be done:
- before sending the second SIGTSTP, we unblock the signal (it gets
automatically blocked upon entering the handler)
- we use raise to send the signal, which makes sure it gets delivered to
the thread which is running the handler
This also means we don't need the SIGCONT handler, as our TSTP handler
resumes right after the entire process is continued, and we can do the
required work there.
I also include a test case for the SIGTSTP flow. It uses pexpect, but it
includes a couple of extra twists. Specifically, I needed to create an
extra process on top of lldb, which will run lldb in a separate process
group and simulate the role of the shell. This is needed because SIGTSTP
is not effective on a session leader (the signal gets delivered, but it
does not cause a stop) -- normally there isn't anyone to notice the
stop.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120320
Add a --exists/-e flag to `settings set` that sets the setting if it
exists, but doesn't print an error otherwise. This is useful for example
when setting options in your ~/.lldbinit that might not exist in older
versions of lldb.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121155
This patch disables TestIOHandlerProcessSTDIO.py for Arm/AArch64 Linux
to silence random test failures on buildbots. IO handler tests are known
to randomly fail on arm/aarch64 linux buildbots due to pexpect timeouts.
The old command wrote to CWD, which doesn't always work, and if it
didn't, there was no workaround (and it crashed on failure). This
patch changed the setting to provide a directory to save the objects
to.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121036
This improves this test a lot because before when using the "attachCommands" to run the following commands:
(lldb) target create -d /path/to/a.out
(lldb) process launch
This was racy as it wasn't stopping the program at the entry point, and the process might run to completion before we can even debug it. With the recent changes to the "attachCommands" we were waiting for the process to stop, but the process might be exited already, and that _should_ have caused the attach to fail since there was no process to attach to. By adding "--stop-at-entry" to the process launch, we ensure this should be less racy and give us a valid process to attach to.
I'm a big fan of the autosuggestion feature but my terminal/color scheme
doesn't display faint any differently than regular lldb output, which
makes the feature a little confusing. This patch add a setting to change
the autosuggestion ANSI escape codes.
For example, to display the autosuggestion in italic, you can add this
to your ~/.lldbinit
settings set show-autosuggestion-ansi-prefix ${ansi.italic}
setting set show-autosuggestion-ansi-suffix ${ansi.normal}
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121064
This disables TestScriptedProcess.test_scripted_process_and_scripted_thread
on Windows since the inferior binary a linked to a dylib that doesn't
build on Windows.
This should fix https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/83/builds/16100
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
This patch introduces a new way to load modules programatically with
Scripted Processes. To do so, the scripted process blueprint holds a
list of dictionary describing the modules to load, which their path or
uuid, load address and eventually a slide offset.
LLDB will fetch that list after launching the ScriptedProcess, and
iterate over each entry to create the module that will be loaded in the
Scripted Process' target.
The patch also refactors the StackCoreScriptedProcess test to stop
inside the `libbaz` module and make sure it's loaded correctly and that
we can fetch some variables from it.
rdar://74520238
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120969
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
This patch re-enables TestEvents.py on Darwin and fixes some crashes
that were happening due to an undefined method.
I ran it 100 times locally with the following command and it passed
every the time:
```
for i in {1..100}; do print $i/100; ./bin/lldb-dotest -p TestEvents.py 2>&1 | rg PASSED; if [ "$?" -eq "1" ]; then break; fi; done
```
Let's see if it still fails non-deterministically on the bots and
eventually also re-enable it on linux.
rdar://37037235
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120607
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
This is a modified version of a previous patch that was reverted: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119797
This version only waits for the process to stop when using "launchCommands" or "attachCommands"...
...and doesn't play with the async mode when doing normal launch/attach.
We discovered that when using "launchCommands" or "attachCommands" that there was an issue where these commands were not being run synchronously. There were further problems in this case where we would get thread events for the process that was just launched or attached before the IDE was ready, which is after "configurationDone" was sent to lldb-vscode.
This fix introduces the ability to wait for the process to stop after "launchCommands" or "attachCommands" are run to ensure that we have a stopped process point that is ready for the debug session to proceed. We spin up the thread that listens for process events before we start the launch or attach, but we don't want stop events being delivered through the DAP protocol until the "configurationDone" packet is received. We now always ignore the stop event with a stop ID of 1, which is the first stop. All normal launch and attach scenarios use the synchronous mode, and "launchCommands and "attachCommands" run an array of LLDB commands in async mode.
This should make our launch with "launchCommands" and attach with "attachCommands" avoid a race condition when the process is being launched or attached.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120755
This reverts commit 6b3b3ef344504334f43afe76c805d2e6e7b587e9.
Jim Ingham informed me that the upper case is a hint to the option
name, like you might see in a menu to show you what the shortcut is.
The check for the prompt isn't essential for this test. The check fail
on the lldb-arm-ubuntu because of what appears to be a missing space
after the prompt. Rather than disabling the test, let's see if we can
get it to pass without it.
This patch fixes a data race in IOHandlerProcessSTDIO. The race is
happens between the main thread and the event handling thread. The main
thread is running the IOHandler (IOHandlerProcessSTDIO::Run()) when an
event comes in that makes us pop the process IO handler which involves
cancelling the IOHandler (IOHandlerProcessSTDIO::Cancel). The latter
calls SetIsDone(true) which modifies m_is_done. At the same time, we
have the main thread reading the variable through GetIsDone().
This patch avoids the race by using a mutex to synchronize the two
threads. On the event thread, in IOHandlerProcessSTDIO ::Cancel method,
we obtain the lock before changing the value of m_is_done. On the main
thread, in IOHandlerProcessSTDIO::Run(), we obtain the lock before
reading the value of m_is_done. Additionally, we delay calling SetIsDone
until after the loop exists, to avoid a potential race between the two
writes.
Write of size 1 at 0x00010b66bb68 by thread T7 (mutexes: write M2862, write M718324145051843688):
#0 lldb_private::IOHandler::SetIsDone(bool) IOHandler.h:90 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x971d84)
#1 IOHandlerProcessSTDIO::Cancel() Process.cpp:4382 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x5ddfec)
#2 lldb_private::Debugger::PopIOHandler(std::__1::shared_ptr<lldb_private::IOHandler> const&) Debugger.cpp:1156 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x3cb2a8)
#3 lldb_private::Debugger::RemoveIOHandler(std::__1::shared_ptr<lldb_private::IOHandler> const&) Debugger.cpp:1063 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x3cbd2c)
#4 lldb_private::Process::PopProcessIOHandler() Process.cpp:4487 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x5c583c)
#5 lldb_private::Debugger::HandleProcessEvent(std::__1::shared_ptr<lldb_private::Event> const&) Debugger.cpp:1549 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x3ceabc)
#6 lldb_private::Debugger::DefaultEventHandler() Debugger.cpp:1622 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x3cf2c0)
#7 std::__1::__function::__func<lldb_private::Debugger::StartEventHandlerThread()::$_2, std::__1::allocator<lldb_private::Debugger::StartEventHandlerThread()::$_2>, void* ()>::operator()() function.h:352 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x3d1bd8)
#8 lldb_private::HostNativeThreadBase::ThreadCreateTrampoline(void*) HostNativeThreadBase.cpp:62 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x4c71ac)
#9 lldb_private::HostThreadMacOSX::ThreadCreateTrampoline(void*) HostThreadMacOSX.mm:18 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x29ef544)
Previous read of size 1 at 0x00010b66bb68 by main thread:
#0 lldb_private::IOHandler::GetIsDone() IOHandler.h:92 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x971db8)
#1 IOHandlerProcessSTDIO::Run() Process.cpp:4339 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x5ddc7c)
#2 lldb_private::Debugger::RunIOHandlers() Debugger.cpp:982 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x3cb48c)
#3 lldb_private::CommandInterpreter::RunCommandInterpreter(lldb_private::CommandInterpreterRunOptions&) CommandInterpreter.cpp:3298 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x506478)
#4 lldb::SBDebugger::RunCommandInterpreter(bool, bool) SBDebugger.cpp:1166 (liblldb.15.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x53604)
#5 Driver::MainLoop() Driver.cpp:634 (lldb:arm64+0x100006294)
#6 main Driver.cpp:853 (lldb:arm64+0x100007344)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120762
SetValueFromCString and SetData methods return false if register can't
be written but they don't set a error message. It sometimes confuses
callers of these methods because they try to get the error message in case of
failure but Status::AsCString returns nullptr.
For example, lldb-vscode crashes due to this bug if some register can't
be written. It invokes SBError::GetCString in case of error and doesn't
check whether the result is nullptr (see request_setVariable implementation in
lldb-vscode.cpp for more info).
Reviewed By: labath, clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120319
See post-commit discussion on https://reviews.llvm.org/D120305.
This change breaks the clang-ppc64le-rhel buildbot, though
there is suspicion that it's an issue with the bot. The change
also had a larger than expected impact on compile-time and
code-size.
This reverts commit 3c4ed02698afec021c6bca80740d1e58e3ee019e
and some followup changes.
This patch relands commit 3e3e79a9e4c378b59f5f393f556e6a84edcd8898, and
fixes the memory sanitizer issue described in D120284, by removing the
output arguments from the LLDB_INSTRUMENT_VA invocation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120599
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
This patch marks TestUnambiguousTailCalls.py as XFAIL on Arm/Linux.
Test started failing after 3c4ed02698afec021c6bca80740d1e58e3ee019e.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120305
This patch is a follow-up of D120100 to address some feedbacks from
@labath.
This should mainly fix the race issue with the even listener by moving
the listener setup to the main thread.
This also changes the SBDebugger::GetProgressFromEvent SWIG binding
arguments to be output only, so the user don't have to provide them.
Finally, this updates the test to check it the out arguments are returned
in a tuple and re-enables the test on all platforms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120284
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
The race is between these two pieces of code that are executed in two separate
lldb-vscode threads (the first is in the main thread and another is in the
event-handling thread):
```
// lldb-vscode.cpp
g_vsc.debugger.SetAsync(false);
g_vsc.target.Launch(launch_info, error);
g_vsc.debugger.SetAsync(true);
```
```
// Target.cpp
bool old_async = debugger.GetAsyncExecution();
debugger.SetAsyncExecution(true);
debugger.GetCommandInterpreter().HandleCommands(GetCommands(), exc_ctx,
options, result);
debugger.SetAsyncExecution(old_async);
```
The sequence that leads to the bug is this one:
1. Main thread enables synchronous mode and launches the process.
2. When the process is launched, it generates the first stop event.
3. This stop event is catched by the event-handling thread and DoOnRemoval
is invoked.
4. Inside DoOnRemoval, this thread runs stop hooks. And before running stop
hooks, the current synchronization mode is stored into old_async (and
right now it is equal to "false").
5. The main thread finishes the launch and returns to lldb-vscode, the
synchronization mode is restored to asynchronous by lldb-vscode.
6. Event-handling thread finishes stop hooks processing and restores the
synchronization mode according to old_async (i.e. makes the mode synchronous)
7. And now the mode is synchronous while lldb-vscode expects it to be
asynchronous. Synchronous mode forbids the process to broadcast public stop
events, so, VS Code just hangs because lldb-vscode doesn't notify it about
stops.
So, this diff makes the target intercept the first stop event if the process is
launched in the synchronous mode, thus preventing stop hooks execution.
The bug is only present on Windows because other platforms already
intercept this event using their own hijacking listeners.
So, this diff also fixes some problems with lldb-vscode tests on Windows to make
it possible to run the related test. Other tests still can't be enabled because
the debugged program prints something into stdout and LLDB can't intercept this
output and redirect it to lldb-vscode properly.
Reviewed By: jingham
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119548
This patch defines the SBDebugger::eBroadcastBitProgress enum in the SWIG
interface and exposes the SBDebugger::{GetProgressFromEvent,GetBroadcaster}
methods as well.
This allows to exercise the API from the script interpreter using python.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120100
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
We discovered that when using "launchCommands" or "attachCommands" that there was an issue where these commands were not being run synchronously. There were further problems in this case where we would get thread events for the process that was just launched or attached before the IDE was ready, which is after "configurationDone" was sent to lldb-vscode.
This fix introduces the ability to wait for the process to stop after the run or attach to ensure that we have a stopped process at the entry point that is ready for the debug session to proceed. This also allows us to run the normal launch or attach without needing to play with the async flag the debugger. We spin up the thread that listens for process events before we start the launch or attach, but we stop the first eStateStopped (with stop ID of zero) event from being delivered through the DAP protocol because the "configurationDone" request handler will deliver it manually as the IDE expects a stop after configuration done. The request_configurationDone will also only deliver the stop packet if the "stopOnEntry" is False in the launch configuration.
Also added a new "timeout" to the launch and attach launch configuration arguments that can be set and defaults to 30 seconds. Since we now poll to detect when the process is stopped, we need a timeout that can be changed in case certain workflows take longer that 30 seconds to attach. If the process is not stopped by the timeout, an error will be retured for the launch or attach.
Added a flag to the vscode.py protocol classes that detects and ensures that no "stopped" events are sent prior to "configurationDone" has been sent and will raise an error if it does happen.
This should make our launching and attaching more reliable and avoid some deadlocks that were being seen (https://reviews.llvm.org/D119548).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119797
Currently we are not emitting debug-info for all cases of structured bindings a
C++17 feature which allows us to bind names to subobjects in an initializer.
A structured binding is represented by a DecompositionDecl AST node and the
binding are represented by a BindingDecl. It looks the original implementation
only covered the tuple like case which be represented by a DeclRefExpr which
contains a VarDecl.
If the binding is to a subobject of the struct the binding will contain a
MemberExpr and in the case of arrays it will contain an ArraySubscriptExpr.
This PR adds support emitting debug-info for the MemberExpr and ArraySubscriptExpr
cases as well as llvm and lldb tests for these cases as well as the tuple case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119178
This patch adds the ability for ScriptedThread to load artificial stack
frames. To do so, the interpreter instance can create a list that will
contain the frame index and its pc address.
Then, when the Scripted Process plugin stops, it will refresh its
Scripted Threads state by invalidating their register context and load
to list from the interpreter object and reconstruct each frame.
This patch also removes all of the default implementation for
`get_stackframes` from the derived ScriptedThread classes, and add the
interface code for the Scripted Thread Interface.
rdar://88721095
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119388
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
After applying the same for as in TestThreadBacktraceRepeat, the test
appears to pass reliably. The skip decorator was added many years ago,
so it's not clear whether this is what caused it to hang.
lldb reports (and lldbutil.continue_to_breakpoint returns) a stop reason
even for suspended threads. Fix the test to expect that.
This was making the test flaky, as most of the time, the two threads
stop simultaneously, and the synchronization code is not executed.
One of the tests in this test setup was copied from a more complex test, and I didn't know
if the setup or the subsequent parts of the test were the ones that fail on Linux. Looks
like it was the latter, so let's mark this succeeding.
This way if you have a long stack, you can issue "thread backtrace --count 10"
and then subsequent <Return>-s will page you through the stack.
This took a little more effort than just adding the repeat command, since
the GetRepeatCommand API was returning a "const char *". That meant the command
had to keep the repeat string alive, which is inconvenient. The original
API returned either a nullptr, or a const char *, so I changed the private API to
return an llvm::Optional<std::string>. Most of the patch is propagating that change.
Also, there was a little thinko in fetching the repeat command. We don't
fetch repeat commands for commands that aren't being added to history, which
is in general reasonable. And we don't add repeat commands to the history -
also reasonable. But we do want the repeat command to be able to generate
the NEXT repeat command. So I adjusted the logic in HandleCommand to work
that way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119046