63 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Pavel Labath
0cfb98f871
[lldb] s/GetAddressRange().GetBaseAddress()/GetAddress() (#125847)
Three more cases where it's obvious that the code is looking for the
address of the function entry point.
2025-02-06 09:17:50 +01:00
Pavel Labath
eb96c8c105
[lldb] Implement (SB)Function::GetInstructions for discontinuous functions (#122933)
The main change is to permit the disassembler class to process/store
multiple (discontinuous) ranges of addresses. The result is not
ambiguous because each instruction knows its size (in addition to its
address), so we can check for discontinuity by looking at whether the
next instruction begins where the previous ends.

This patch doesn't handle the "disassemble" CLI command, which uses a
more elaborate mechanism for disassembling and printing instructions.
2025-01-15 10:37:06 +01:00
Pavel Labath
66a88f62cd
[lldb] Add Function::GetAddress and redirect some uses (#115836)
Many calls to Function::GetAddressRange() were not interested in the
range itself. Instead they wanted to find the address of the function
(its entry point) or the base address for relocation of function-scoped
entities (technically, the two don't need to be the same, but there's
isn't good reason for them not to be). This PR creates a separate
function for retrieving this, and changes the existing
(non-controversial) uses to call that instead.
2025-01-10 09:56:55 +01:00
Pavel Labath
51b74bb9f6 Reapply "[lldb] Use the function block as a source for function ranges (#117996)"
This reverts commit 2526d5b1689389da9b194b5ec2878cfb2f4aca93, reapplying
ba14dac481564000339ba22ab867617590184f4c after fixing the conflict with
 #117532. The change is that Function::GetAddressRanges now recomputes
the returned value instead of returning the member. This means it now
returns a value instead of a reference type.
2024-12-03 11:58:36 +01:00
Pavel Labath
59bb9b915e
[lldb] Expose discontinuous functions through SBFunction::GetRanges (#117532)
SBFunction::GetEndAddress doesn't really make sense for discontinuous
functions, so I'm declaring it deprecated. GetStartAddress sort of makes
sense, if one uses it to find the functions entry point, so I'm keeping
that undeprecated.

I've made the test a Shell tests because these make it easier to create
discontinuous functions regardless of the host os and architecture. They
do make testing the python API harder, but I think I've managed to come
up with something not entirely unreasonable.
2024-12-03 10:14:33 +01:00
Jonas Devlieghere
f109517d15
[lldb] Support overriding the disassembly CPU & features (#115382)
Add the ability to override the disassembly CPU and CPU features through
a target setting (`target.disassembly-cpu` and
`target.disassembly-features`) and a `disassemble` command option
(`--cpu` and `--features`).

This is especially relevant for architectures like RISC-V which relies
heavily on CPU extensions.

The majority of this patch is plumbing the options through. I recommend
looking at DisassemblerLLVMC and the test for the observable change in
behavior.
2024-11-11 16:27:15 -08:00
Miro Bucko
48175a5d9f
[lldb] Add SBAddressRange and SBAddressRangeList to SB API (#93836)
This adds new SB API calls and classes to allow a user of the SB API to obtain an address range from SBFunction and SBBlock. This is a second attempt to land the reverted PR #92014.
2024-05-30 10:38:21 -07:00
Michael Buch
8b600a3732 Revert "Add SBAddressRange and SBAddressRangeList to SB API (#92014)"
This reverts commit 42944e4600827738fae868f0df831fb2678be8b4.
2024-05-30 12:40:05 +01:00
Miro Bucko
42944e4600
Add SBAddressRange and SBAddressRangeList to SB API (#92014)
This adds new SB API calls and classes to allow a user of the SB API to obtain an address ranges from SBFunction and SBBlock.
2024-05-28 09:29:10 -07:00
Alex Langford
41714c959d [lldb] Guarantee the lifetimes of all strings returned from SBAPI
LLDB should guarantee that the strings returned by SBAPI methods
live forever. I went through every method that returns a string and made
sure that it was added to the ConstString StringPool before returning if
it wasn't obvious that it was already doing so.
I've also updated the docs to document this behavior.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150804
2023-05-18 15:13:36 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
1755f5b1d7 [lldb] Decouple instrumentation from the reproducers
Remove the last remaining references to the reproducers from the
instrumentation. This patch renames the relevant files and macros.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117712
2022-01-20 18:06:14 -08:00
Jonas Devlieghere
d232abc33b [lldb] Remove LLDB_RECORD_RESULT macro 2022-01-09 22:54:17 -08:00
Jonas Devlieghere
d51402ac6b [lldb] Remove reproducer instrumentation
This patch removes most of the reproducer instrumentation. It keeps
around the LLDB_RECORD_* macros for logging. See [1] for more details.

[1] https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2021-September/017045.html

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116847
2022-01-09 21:40:55 -08:00
Jonas Devlieghere
9494c510af [lldb] Use C++11 default member initializers
This converts a default constructor's member initializers into C++11
default member initializers. This patch was automatically generated with
clang-tidy and the modernize-use-default-member-init check.

$ run-clang-tidy.py -header-filter='lldb' -checks='-*,modernize-use-default-member-init' -fix

This is a mass-refactoring patch and this commit will be added to
.git-blame-ignore-revs.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103483
2021-06-09 09:43:13 -07:00
Jason Molenda
e9fe788d32 Target::ReadMemory read from read-only binary file Section, not memory
Commiting this patch for Augusto Noronha who is getting set
up still.

This patch changes Target::ReadMemory so the default behavior
when a read is in a Section that is read-only is to fetch the
data from the local binary image, instead of reading it from
memory.  Update all callers to use their old preferences
(the old prefer_file_cache bool) using the new API; we should
revisit these calls and see if they really intend to read
live memory, or if reading from a read-only Section would be
equivalent and important for performance-sensitive cases.

rdar://30634422

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100338
2021-04-16 16:13:07 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
6cd4a4cd02 [lldb] Pass reference instead of pointer in protected SBAddress methods.
Every call to the protected SBAddress constructor and the SetAddress
method takes the address of a valid object which means we might as well
pass it as a const reference instead of a pointer and drop the null
check.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88249
2020-09-25 11:47:05 -07:00
Pavel Labath
04592d5b23 [lldb] s/ExecutionContext/Target in Disassembler
Some functions in this file only use the "target" component of an
execution context. Adjust the argument lists to reflect that.

This avoids some defensive null checks and simplifies most of the
callers.
2020-03-05 14:46:39 +01:00
Alex Langford
22b044877d [lldb][NFCI] Remove unused LanguageType parameters
These parameters are unused in these methods, and some of them only had a
LanguageType parameter to pipe to other methods that don't use it
either.
2020-01-30 21:57:23 -08:00
Raphael Isemann
808142876c [lldb][NFC] Fix all formatting errors in .cpp file headers
Summary:
A *.cpp file header in LLDB (and in LLDB) should like this:
```
//===-- TestUtilities.cpp -------------------------------------------------===//
```
However in LLDB most of our source files have arbitrary changes to this format and
these changes are spreading through LLDB as folks usually just use the existing
source files as templates for their new files (most notably the unnecessary
editor language indicator `-*- C++ -*-` is spreading and in every review
someone is pointing out that this is wrong, resulting in people pointing out that this
is done in the same way in other files).

This patch removes most of these inconsistencies including the editor language indicators,
all the different missing/additional '-' characters, files that center the file name, missing
trailing `===//` (mostly caused by clang-format breaking the line).

Reviewers: aprantl, espindola, jfb, shafik, JDevlieghere

Reviewed By: JDevlieghere

Subscribers: dexonsmith, wuzish, emaste, sdardis, nemanjai, kbarton, MaskRay, atanasyan, arphaman, jfb, abidh, jsji, JDevlieghere, usaxena95, lldb-commits

Tags: #lldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73258
2020-01-24 08:52:55 +01:00
Konrad Kleine
248a13057a [lldb] NFC modernize codebase with modernize-use-nullptr
Summary:
NFC = [[ https://llvm.org/docs/Lexicon.html#nfc | Non functional change ]]

This commit is the result of modernizing the LLDB codebase by using
`nullptr` instread of `0` or `NULL`. See
https://clang.llvm.org/extra/clang-tidy/checks/modernize-use-nullptr.html
for more information.

This is the command I ran and I to fix and format the code base:

```
run-clang-tidy.py \
	-header-filter='.*' \
	-checks='-*,modernize-use-nullptr' \
	-fix ~/dev/llvm-project/lldb/.* \
	-format \
	-style LLVM \
	-p ~/llvm-builds/debug-ninja-gcc
```

NOTE: There were also changes to `llvm/utils/unittest` but I did not
include them because I felt that maybe this library shall be updated in
isolation somehow.

NOTE: I know this is a rather large commit but it is a nobrainer in most
parts.

Reviewers: martong, espindola, shafik, #lldb, JDevlieghere

Reviewed By: JDevlieghere

Subscribers: arsenm, jvesely, nhaehnle, hiraditya, JDevlieghere, teemperor, rnkovacs, emaste, kubamracek, nemanjai, ki.stfu, javed.absar, arichardson, kbarton, jrtc27, MaskRay, atanasyan, dexonsmith, arphaman, jfb, jsji, jdoerfert, lldb-commits, llvm-commits

Tags: #lldb, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61847

llvm-svn: 361484
2019-05-23 11:14:47 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere
306809f292 [Reproducers] Capture return values of functions returning by ptr/ref
For some reason I had convinced myself that functions returning by
pointer or reference do not require recording their result. However,
after further considering I don't see how that could work, at least not
with the current implementation. Interestingly enough, the reproducer
instrumentation already (mostly) accounts for this, though the
lldb-instr tool did not.

This patch adds the missing macros and updates the lldb-instr tool.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60178

llvm-svn: 357639
2019-04-03 21:31:22 +00:00
Michal Gorny
ae211ece6a [lldb] [Reproducer] Move SBRegistry registration into declaring files
Move SBRegistry method registrations from SBReproducer.cpp into files
declaring the individual APIs, in order to reduce the memory consumption
during build and improve maintainability.  The current humongous
SBRegistry constructor exhausts all memory on a NetBSD system with 4G
RAM + 4G swap, therefore making it impossible to build LLDB.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59427

llvm-svn: 356481
2019-03-19 17:13:13 +00:00
Pavel Labath
7f5237bccc Add "operator bool" to SB APIs
Summary:
Our python version of the SB API has (the python equivalent of)
operator bool, but the C++ version doesn't.

This is because our python operators are added by modify-python-lldb.py,
which performs postprocessing on the swig-generated interface files.

In this patch, I add the "operator bool" to all SB classes which have an
IsValid method (which is the same logic used by modify-python-lldb.py).
This way, we make the two interfaces more constent, and it allows us to
rely on swig's automatic syntesis of python __nonzero__ methods instead
of doing manual fixups.

Reviewers: zturner, jingham, clayborg, jfb, serge-sans-paille

Subscribers: jdoerfert, lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58792

llvm-svn: 355824
2019-03-11 13:58:46 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere
581af8b09d [SBAPI] Log from record macro
The current record macros already log the function being called. This
patch extends the macros to also log their input arguments and removes
explicit logging from the SB API.

This might degrade the amount of information in some cases (because of
smarter casts or efforts to log return values). However I think this is
outweighed by the increased coverage and consistency. Furthermore, using
the reproducer infrastructure, diagnosing bugs in the API layer should
become much easier compared to relying on log messages.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59101

llvm-svn: 355649
2019-03-07 22:47:13 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere
baf5664f50 [Reproducers] Add SBReproducer macros
This patch adds the SBReproducer macros needed to capture and reply the
corresponding calls. This patch was generated by running the lldb-instr
tool on the API source files.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57475

llvm-svn: 355459
2019-03-06 00:06:00 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
2946cd7010 Update the file headers across all of the LLVM projects in the monorepo
to reflect the new license.

We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.

Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.

llvm-svn: 351636
2019-01-19 08:50:56 +00:00
Zachary Turner
6f9e690199 Move Log from Core -> Utility.
All references to Host and Core have been removed, so this
class can now safely be lowered into Utility.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30559

llvm-svn: 296909
2017-03-03 20:56:28 +00:00
Kate Stone
b9c1b51e45 *** This commit represents a complete reformatting of the LLDB source code
*** to conform to clang-format’s LLVM style.  This kind of mass change has
*** two obvious implications:

Firstly, merging this particular commit into a downstream fork may be a huge
effort.  Alternatively, it may be worth merging all changes up to this commit,
performing the same reformatting operation locally, and then discarding the
merge for this particular commit.  The commands used to accomplish this
reformatting were as follows (with current working directory as the root of
the repository):

    find . \( -iname "*.c" -or -iname "*.cpp" -or -iname "*.h" -or -iname "*.mm" \) -exec clang-format -i {} +
    find . -iname "*.py" -exec autopep8 --in-place --aggressive --aggressive {} + ;

The version of clang-format used was 3.9.0, and autopep8 was 1.2.4.

Secondly, “blame” style tools will generally point to this commit instead of
a meaningful prior commit.  There are alternatives available that will attempt
to look through this change and find the appropriate prior commit.  YMMV.

llvm-svn: 280751
2016-09-06 20:57:50 +00:00
Saleem Abdulrasool
bb19a13c0b second pass over removal of Mutex and Condition
llvm-svn: 270024
2016-05-19 05:13:57 +00:00
Greg Clayton
fe68904fa6 Fixed TypeMemberFunctionImpl to not use clang types directly but use the new CompilerDecl class to do the job in an abstract way.
Fixed a crash that would happen if you tried to get the name of a constructor or destructor by calling "getDeclName()" instead of calling getName() (which would assert and crash).

Added the ability to get function arguments names from SBFunction.

llvm-svn: 252622
2015-11-10 17:47:04 +00:00
Jason Molenda
6ab659a922 First part of an attempt to indicate to the user when they are
debugging optimized code.  Adds new methods on Function/SBFunction
to query whether a given function is optimized.  Adds a new
function.is-optimized format entity and changes the default 
frame-format to append "[opt]" if the function was built with
optimization.

The only indication that a binary was built with optimization
that we have right now is the presence of the DW_AT_APPLE_optimized
attribute (DW_FORM_flag value 1) in the DW_TAG_compile_unit.
The absence of this flag may mean that the compile_unit was not
compiled with optimization, or it may mean that the producer 
does not generate this attribute.

Currently this only works for dSYM debugging.  When we create
the CompileUnit with dwarf-in-.o-file debugging we don't have
the attribute value yet so it's not set.  I need to find the
flag value when we do start to read the .o file DWARF and 
set the CompileUnit's status at that point - but haven't 
done it yet.

I'm also going to add a mechanism for issuing warnings to users
such that they're only issued once in a debug session and 
there is away for users to suppress these warnings altogether
via .lldbinit file settings.  But I want to get this changeset
committed now that it's at a useful state.

<rdar://problem/19281172> 

llvm-svn: 243508
2015-07-29 00:42:47 +00:00
Greg Clayton
ddaf6a7259 Make many mangled functions that might demangle a name be allowed to specify a language to use in order to soon support Pascal and Java demangling. Dawn Perchik will take care of making this so.
llvm-svn: 241751
2015-07-08 22:32:23 +00:00
Enrico Granata
c1f705c229 Add a GetDisplayName() API to SBFrame, SBFunction and SBSymbol
This API is currently a no-op (in the sense that it has the same behavior as the already existing GetName()), but is meant long-term to provide a best-for-visualization version of the name of a function

It is still not hooked up to the command line 'bt' command, nor to the 'gui' mode, but I do have ideas on how to make that work going forward

rdar://21203242

llvm-svn: 241482
2015-07-06 18:28:46 +00:00
Enrico Granata
6cd8e0c9b0 Add APIs on SBFunction and SBCompileUnit to inquire about the language type that the function/compile unit is defined in
llvm-svn: 222189
2014-11-17 23:06:20 +00:00
Saleem Abdulrasool
324a103619 sweep up -Wformat warnings from gcc
This is a purely mechanical change explicitly casting any parameters for printf
style conversion.  This cleans up the warnings emitted by gcc 4.8 on Linux.

llvm-svn: 205607
2014-04-04 04:06:10 +00:00
Jason Molenda
6b3e6d5487 Disassembler::DisassembleRange() currently calls Target::ReadMemory
with prefer_file_cache == false.  This is what we want to do when
the user is doing a disassemble command -- show the actual memory
contents in case the memory has been corrupted or something -- but
when we're profiling functions for stepping or unwinding
(ThreadPlanStepRange::GetInstructionsForAddress,
UnwindAssemblyInstEmulation::GetNonCallSiteUnwindP) we can read
__TEXT instructions directly out of the file, if it exists.
<rdar://problem/14397491> 

llvm-svn: 190638
2013-09-12 23:23:35 +00:00
Greg Clayton
5160ce5c72 <rdar://problem/13521159>
LLDB is crashing when logging is enabled from lldb-perf-clang. This has to do with the global destructor chain as the process and its threads are being torn down.

All logging channels now make one and only one instance that is kept in a global pointer which is never freed. This guarantees that logging can correctly continue as the process tears itself down.

llvm-svn: 178191
2013-03-27 23:08:40 +00:00
Jim Ingham
0f063ba6b4 Convert from the C-based LLVM Disassembler shim to the full MC Disassembler API's.
Calculate "can branch" using the MC API's rather than our hand-rolled regex'es.
As extra credit, allow setting the disassembly flavor for x86 based architectures to intel or att.

<rdar://problem/11319574>
<rdar://problem/9329275>

llvm-svn: 176392
2013-03-02 00:26:47 +00:00
Daniel Malea
d01b2953fa Resolve printf formatting warnings on Linux:
- use macros from inttypes.h for format strings instead of OS-specific types

Patch from Matt Kopec!

llvm-svn: 168945
2012-11-29 21:49:15 +00:00
Jim Ingham
10ebffa48a Don't expose the pthread_mutex_t underlying the Mutex & Mutex::Locker classes.
No one was using it and Locker(pthread_mutex_t *) immediately asserts for 
pthread_mutex_t's that don't come from a Mutex anyway.  Rather than try to make
that work, we should maintain the Mutex abstraction and not pass around the
platform implementation...

Make Mutex::Locker::Lock take a Mutex & or a Mutex *, and remove the constructor
taking a pthread_mutex_t *.  You no longer need to call Mutex::GetMutex to pass
your mutex to a Locker (you can't in fact, since I made it private.)

llvm-svn: 156221
2012-05-04 23:02:50 +00:00
Greg Clayton
37a0a24a5f No functionality changes, mostly cleanup.
Cleaned up the Mutex::Locker and the ReadWriteLock classes a bit.

Also cleaned up the GDBRemoteCommunication class to not have so many packet functions. Used the "NoLock" versions of send/receive packet functions when possible for a bit of performance.

llvm-svn: 154458
2012-04-11 00:24:49 +00:00
Greg Clayton
e72dfb321c <rdar://problem/10103468>
I started work on being able to add symbol files after a debug session
had started with a new "target symfile add" command and quickly ran into
problems with stale Address objects in breakpoint locations that had 
lldb_private::Section pointers into modules that had been removed or 
replaced. This also let to grabbing stale modules from those sections. 
So I needed to thread harded the Address, Section and related objects.

To do this I modified the ModuleChild class to now require a ModuleSP
on initialization so that a weak reference can created. I also changed
all places that were handing out "Section *" to have them hand out SectionSP.
All ObjectFile, SymbolFile and SymbolVendors were inheriting from ModuleChild
so all of the find plug-in, static creation function and constructors now
require ModuleSP references instead of Module *. 

Address objects now have weak references to their sections which can
safely go stale when a module gets destructed. 

This checkin doesn't complete the "target symfile add" command, but it
does get us a lot clioser to being able to do such things without a high
risk of crashing or memory corruption.

llvm-svn: 151336
2012-02-24 01:59:29 +00:00
Greg Clayton
5569e64ea7 Removed all of the "#ifndef SWIG" from the SB header files since we are using
interface (.i) files for each class.

Changed the FindFunction class from:

uint32_t
SBTarget::FindFunctions (const char *name, 
                         uint32_t name_type_mask, 
                         bool append, 
                         lldb::SBSymbolContextList& sc_list)

uint32_t
SBModule::FindFunctions (const char *name, 
                         uint32_t name_type_mask, 
                         bool append, 
                         lldb::SBSymbolContextList& sc_list)

To:

lldb::SBSymbolContextList
SBTarget::FindFunctions (const char *name, 
                         uint32_t name_type_mask = lldb::eFunctionNameTypeAny);

lldb::SBSymbolContextList
SBModule::FindFunctions (const char *name,
                         uint32_t name_type_mask = lldb::eFunctionNameTypeAny);

This makes the API easier to use from python. Also added the ability to
append a SBSymbolContext or a SBSymbolContextList to a SBSymbolContextList.

Exposed properties for lldb.SBSymbolContextList in python:

lldb.SBSymbolContextList.modules => list() or all lldb.SBModule objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.compile_units => list() or all lldb.SBCompileUnits objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.functions => list() or all lldb.SBFunction objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.blocks => list() or all lldb.SBBlock objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.line_entries => list() or all lldb.SBLineEntry objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.symbols => list() or all lldb.SBSymbol objects in the list

This allows a call to the SBTarget::FindFunctions(...) and SBModule::FindFunctions(...)
and then the result can be used to extract the desired information:

sc_list = lldb.target.FindFunctions("erase")

for function in sc_list.functions:
    print function
for symbol in sc_list.symbols:
    print symbol

Exposed properties for the lldb.SBSymbolContext objects in python:

lldb.SBSymbolContext.module => lldb.SBModule
lldb.SBSymbolContext.compile_unit => lldb.SBCompileUnit
lldb.SBSymbolContext.function => lldb.SBFunction
lldb.SBSymbolContext.block => lldb.SBBlock
lldb.SBSymbolContext.line_entry => lldb.SBLineEntry
lldb.SBSymbolContext.symbol => lldb.SBSymbol


Exposed properties for the lldb.SBBlock objects in python:

lldb.SBBlock.parent => lldb.SBBlock for the parent block that contains
lldb.SBBlock.sibling => lldb.SBBlock for the sibling block to the current block
lldb.SBBlock.first_child => lldb.SBBlock for the first child block to the current block
lldb.SBBlock.call_site => for inline functions, return a lldb.declaration object that gives the call site file, line and column
lldb.SBBlock.name => for inline functions this is the name of the inline function that this block represents
lldb.SBBlock.inlined_block => returns the inlined function block that contains this block (might return itself if the current block is an inlined block)
lldb.SBBlock.range[int] => access the address ranges for a block by index, a list() with start and end address is returned
lldb.SBBlock.ranges => an array or all address ranges for this block
lldb.SBBlock.num_ranges => the number of address ranges for this blcok

SBFunction objects can now get the SBType and the SBBlock that represents the
top scope of the function.

SBBlock objects can now get the variable list from the current block. The value
list returned allows varaibles to be viewed prior with no process if code
wants to check the variables in a function. There are two ways to get a variable
list from a SBBlock:

lldb::SBValueList
SBBlock::GetVariables (lldb::SBFrame& frame,
                       bool arguments,
                       bool locals,
                       bool statics,
                       lldb::DynamicValueType use_dynamic);

lldb::SBValueList
SBBlock::GetVariables (lldb::SBTarget& target,
                       bool arguments,
                       bool locals,
                       bool statics);

When a SBFrame is used, the values returned will be locked down to the frame
and the values will be evaluated in the context of that frame.

When a SBTarget is used, global an static variables can be viewed without a
running process.

llvm-svn: 149853
2012-02-06 01:44:54 +00:00
Greg Clayton
b9556acc9e SBFrame is now threadsafe using some extra tricks. One issue is that stack
frames might go away (the object itself, not the actual logical frame) when
we are single stepping due to the way we currently sometimes end up flushing
frames when stepping in/out/over. They later will come back to life 
represented by another object yet they have the same StackID. Now when you get
a lldb::SBFrame object, it will track the frame it is initialized with until 
the thread goes away or the StackID no longer exists in the stack for the 
thread it was created on. It uses a weak_ptr to both the frame and thread and
also stores the StackID. These three items allow us to determine when the
stack frame object has gone away (the weak_ptr will be NULL) and allows us to
find the correct frame again. In our test suite we had such cases where we
were just getting lucky when something like this happened:

1 - stop at breakpoint
2 - get first frame in thread where we stopped
3 - run an expression that causes the program to JIT and run code
4 - run more expressions on the frame from step 2 which was very very luckily
    still around inside a shared pointer, yet, not part of the current 
    thread (a new stack frame object had appeared with the same stack ID and
    depth). 
    
We now avoid all such issues and properly keep up to date, or we start 
returning errors when the frame doesn't exist and always responds with
invalid answers.

Also fixed the UserSettingsController  (not going to rewrite this just yet)
so that it doesn't crash on shutdown. Using weak_ptr's came in real handy to
track when the master controller has already gone away and this allowed me to
pull out the previous NotifyOwnerIsShuttingDown() patch as it is no longer 
needed.

llvm-svn: 149231
2012-01-30 07:41:31 +00:00
Greg Clayton
e1cd1be6d6 Switching back to using std::tr1::shared_ptr. We originally switched away
due to RTTI worries since llvm and clang don't use RTTI, but I was able to 
switch back with no issues as far as I can tell. Once the RTTI issue wasn't
an issue, we were looking for a way to properly track weak pointers to objects
to solve some of the threading issues we have been running into which naturally
led us back to std::tr1::weak_ptr. We also wanted the ability to make a shared 
pointer from just a pointer, which is also easily solved using the 
std::tr1::enable_shared_from_this class. 

The main reason for this move back is so we can start properly having weak
references to objects. Currently a lldb_private::Thread class has a refrence
to its parent lldb_private::Process. This doesn't work well when we now hand
out a SBThread object that contains a shared pointer to a lldb_private::Thread
as this SBThread can be held onto by external clients and if they end up
using one of these objects we can easily crash.

So the next task is to start adopting std::tr1::weak_ptr where ever it makes
sense which we can do with lldb_private::Debugger, lldb_private::Target,
lldb_private::Process, lldb_private::Thread, lldb_private::StackFrame, and
many more objects now that they are no longer using intrusive ref counted
pointer objects (you can't do std::tr1::weak_ptr functionality with intrusive
pointers).

llvm-svn: 149207
2012-01-29 20:56:30 +00:00
Greg Clayton
81c22f6104 Moved lldb::user_id_t values to be 64 bit. This was going to be needed for
process IDs, and thread IDs, but was mainly needed for for the UserID's for
Types so that DWARF with debug map can work flawlessly. With DWARF in .o files
the type ID was the DIE offset in the DWARF for the .o file which is not
unique across all .o files, so now the SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap class will
make the .o file index part (the high 32 bits) of the unique type identifier
so it can uniquely identify the types.

llvm-svn: 142534
2011-10-19 18:09:39 +00:00
Greg Clayton
c14ee32db5 Converted the lldb_private::Process over to use the intrusive
shared pointers.

Changed the ExecutionContext over to use shared pointers for
the target, process, thread and frame since these objects can
easily go away at any time and any object that was holding onto
an ExecutionContext was running the risk of using a bad object.

Now that the shared pointers for target, process, thread and
frame are just a single pointer (they all use the instrusive
shared pointers) the execution context is much safer and still
the same size. 

Made the shared pointers in the the ExecutionContext class protected
and made accessors for all of the various ways to get at the pointers,
references, and shared pointers.

llvm-svn: 140298
2011-09-22 04:58:26 +00:00
Greg Clayton
1080edbcdd Cleaned up the Disassembler code a bit more. You can now request a disassembler
plugin by name on the command line for when there is more than one disassembler
plugin.

Taught the Opcode class to dump itself so that "disassembler -b" will dump
the bytes correctly for each opcode type. Modified all places that were passing
the opcode bytes buffer in so that the bytes could be displayed to just pass
in a bool that indicates if we should dump the opcode bytes since the opcode
now lives inside llvm_private::Instruction.

llvm-svn: 128290
2011-03-25 18:03:16 +00:00
Greg Clayton
93d00df578 Export the ability to get the start and end addresses for functions
and symbols, and also allow clients to get the prologue size in bytes:

    SBAddress
    SBFunction::GetStartAddress ();
    
    SBAddress
    SBFunction::GetEndAddress ();
    
    uint32_t
    SBFunction::GetPrologueByteSize ();

    SBAddress
    SBSymbol::GetStartAddress ();
    
    SBAddress
    SBSymbol::GetEndAddress ();
    
    uint32_t
    SBSymbol::GetPrologueByteSize ();

llvm-svn: 126892
2011-03-02 23:01:18 +00:00
Greg Clayton
af67cecd47 The LLDB API (lldb::SB*) is now thread safe!
llvm-svn: 122262
2010-12-20 20:49:23 +00:00