Summary:
The args class is used in plenty of places (a lot of them in the lower lldb
layers) for representing a list of arguments, and most of these places don't
care about option parsing. Moving the option parsing out of the class removes
the largest external dependency (there are a couple more, but these are in
static functions), and brings us closer to being able to move it to the
Utility module).
The new home for these functions is the Options class, which was already used
as an argument to the parse calls, so this just inverts the dependency between
the two.
The functions are themselves are mainly just copied -- the biggest functional
change I've made to them is to avoid modifying the input Args argument (getopt
likes to permute the argument vector), as it was weird to have another class
reorder the entries in Args class. So now the functions don't modify the input
arguments, and (for those where it makes sense) return a new Args vector
instead. I've also made the addition of a "fake arg0" (required for getopt
compatibility) an implementation detail rather than a part of interface.
While doing that I noticed that ParseForCompletion function was recording the
option indexes in the shuffled vector, but then the consumer was looking up the
entries in the unshuffled one. This manifested itself as us not being able to
complete "watchpoint set variable foo --" (because getopt would move "foo" to
the end). Surprisingly all other completions (e.g. "watchpoint set variable foo
--w") were not affected by this. However, I couldn't find a comprehensive test
for command argument completion, so I consolidated the existing tests and added
a bunch of new ones.
Reviewers: davide, jingham, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43837
llvm-svn: 327110
There is a mailing list discussion re: r325927 about why this test fails
in the dsym variant. I've marked it skipped for now, until the issue is
resolved.
llvm-svn: 327089
The test "test_fp_special_purpose_register_read" in TestRegisters.py
fails on Darwin machines configured to use an out-of-tree debugserver.
The error message is: 'register read ftag' returns expected result, got
'ftag = 0x80'. This indicates that the debugserver in use is too old.
This commit introduces a decorator which can be used to skip tests which
rely on having a just-built debugserver. This resolves the issue:
$ ./bin/llvm-dotest -p TestRegisters.py -v
1 out of 617 test suites processed - TestRegisters.py
Test Methods: 7
Success: 6
Skip: 1
...
llvm-svn: 327052
Summary:
On PPC64, the tested functions were being entered through their local entry point, while the tests expected the program to stop at the function start address, that, for PPC64, corresponds to the global entry point.
To fix the issue, the test program was modified to call the functions to be tested through function pointers, which, on PPC64, force the calls through the global entry point, while not affecting the test on other platforms.
Reviewers: clayborg, labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: alexandreyy, lbianc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43768
Patch by Leandro Lupori <leandro.lupori@gmail.com>.
llvm-svn: 327013
Test that "lldb-mi --interpreter" can interpret "target list" CLI command.
Patch by Alex Polyakov!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44040
llvm-svn: 326847
Summary:
The test was failing in remote debugging scenario with windows as a host
as cmd.exe is not able to parse the complicated shell commands in the
Makefile.
The test seemed like a perfect candidate for a more focused testing
approach, so I have rewritten in on top of lldb-test's module-sections
functionality. The slight gotcha there was that the
Module::GetSectionList does not include the sections from the symbol
file until someone manually calls Module::GetSymbolVendor. Normally,
this is not an issue, because someone will have initialized the symbol
vendor by the time anyone starts looking at the sections. However, when
all one this is dump the section list, we run into this problem.
I've tried making this behavior more automatic, but it turns out it's
not that easy, so for now, I just manually initialize the Symbol Vendor
before dumping out the sections in lldb-test.
Reviewers: jankratochvil
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42914
llvm-svn: 326805
Summary:
- reg_nums were missing the end marker entry
- marked FP test to be skipped for ppc64
Reviewers: labath, clayborg
Reviewed By: labath, clayborg
Subscribers: alexandreyy, lbianc, nemanjai, kbarton
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43767
Patch by Leandro Lupori <leandro.lupori@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 326775
were originally written by Chris Bieneman, they've undergone a
number of changes since then.
Also including the debugserver bridgeos support, another arm
environment that runs Darwin akin to ios. These codepaths are
activated when running in a bridgeos environment which we're not
set up to test today.
There's additional (small) lldb changes to handle bridgeos binaries
that still need to be merged up.
Tested on a darwin system with avx512 hardware and without.
<rdar://problem/36424951>
llvm-svn: 326756
These tests fail with a relatively frequently on Darwin machines with
errors such as:
File ".../lldb/third_party/Python/module/pexpect-2.4/pexpect.py", line 1444, in expect_loop
raise EOF(str(e) + '\n' + str(self))
EOF: End Of File (EOF) in read_nonblocking(). Empty string style platform.
The unpredictable failures make these tests noisy.
rdar://37046976
llvm-svn: 326739
It turns out that setting the clang module cache after LLDB has a
Target can be too late. In particular, the Swift language plugin needs
to know the setting without having access to a Target. This patch
moves the setting into the *LLDB* module cache, where it is a global
setting that is available before any Target is created and more
importantly, is shared between all Targets.
rdar://problem/37944432
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43984
llvm-svn: 326628
Adding categories to inline tests does not work because the attribute
is set at the function level. For methods, this means it applies to all
instances of that particular class. While this is what we want in most
cases, it's not for inline tests, where different instances correspond
to different tests.
With the workaround in place, assigning a category to one test resulted
in the category applied to *all* inline tests.
This patch removes the workaround and throws an exception with an
informative error message, to prevent this from happening in the future.
llvm-svn: 326552
Summary:
The inferior was sleeping before doing any interesting work. I remove that
to make the test faster.
While looking at the purpose of the test (to check that watchpoints are
propagated to all existing threads - r140757) I noticed that the test has
diverged from the original intention and now it creates the threads *after* the
watchpoint is set (this probably happened during the std::thread refactor).
After some discussion, we decided both scenarios make sense, so I modify the
test to test both.
The watchpoint propagation functionality is not really debug info depenent, so
I also stop replication of this test. This brings the test's time from ~108s
down to 4s.
Reviewers: davide, jingham
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43857
llvm-svn: 326514
gcc will say that the type of "this" is "T * const", clang "T *".
Compare the unqualified type names to erase the difference between the
two, as the constness is not a part of this test.
FWIW, I think that the gcc behavior makes more sense here.
llvm-svn: 326449
Before the change to compile tests out-of-tree, the cleanup classmethod
in TestQuoting.py would remove a temp file. After the change it threw an
exception due to a malformed call to getBuildArtifact().
Bring back the old behavior.
llvm-svn: 326414
There's a bug in FindTypes, it ignores the exact flag if you pass a name that doesn't begin with
:: and pass eTypeClassAny for the type.
In this case we always know that the name we get from the vtable name is absolute so we can
work around the bug by prepending the "::". This doesn't fix the FindTypes bug.
<rdar://problem/38010986>
llvm-svn: 326412
This reverts commit r326261 as it introduces inconsistencies in the
handling of load addresses for ObjectFileELF -- some parts of the class
use physical addresses, and some use virtual. This has manifested itself
as us not being able to set the load address of the vdso "module" on
android.
llvm-svn: 326367
r326140 exposed the fact that we are not actually running inline tests on
remote targets. The tests fail to launch the inferior in the first place
because they passed an invalid working directory to the launch function.
This should fix that.
llvm-svn: 326264
Summary:
When writing an object file over gdb-remote, use the vFlashErase, vFlashWrite, and vFlashDone commands if the write address is in a flash memory region. A bare metal target may have this kind of setup.
- Update ObjectFileELF to set load addresses using physical addresses. A typical case may be a data section with a physical address in ROM and a virtual address in RAM, which should be loaded to the ROM address.
- Add support for querying the target's qXfer:memory-map, which contains information about flash memory regions, leveraging MemoryRegionInfo data structures with minor modifications
- Update ProcessGDBRemote to use vFlash commands in DoWriteMemory when the target address is in a flash region
Original discussion at http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2018-January/013093.html
Reviewers: clayborg, labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: arichardson, emaste, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42145
Patch by Owen Shaw <llvm@owenpshaw.net>
llvm-svn: 326261
This test contained a copy of the inferior used by most of llgs test.
This was done to enable better paralelization, but now it's irrelevant.
llvm-svn: 326218
Further investigation required; tests will be enabled on the buildbot
worker soon. Marking failing tests for now in order to start with a
green buildbot while investigation takes place.
This is a recommit of r326134, with the required import added.
llvm.org/pr36527
llvm-svn: 326166
These tests all test very similar things, and use the same inferior.
They were only placed in separate folders to achieve better
paralelization. Now that we paralelize at a file level, this is no
longer relevant, and we can put them together again.
llvm-svn: 326159
When writing an inline test, there is no way to make sure that any of
the inline commands are actually executed, so this patch adds a sanity
check that at least one breakpoint was hit. This avoids a test with no
breakpoints being hit passing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43694
llvm-svn: 326140
Further investigation required; tests will be enabled on the buildbot
worker soon. Marking failing tests for now in order to start with a
green buildbot while investigation takes place.
llvm.org/pr36527
llvm-svn: 326134
Without this fix, the test ERRORs because the link of the inferior fails. This
patch adds the LLDB_TEST_API macro where needed and uses the new -2 magic
value for num_expected_locations to account for lazy-loading of module symbols
on Windows.
With this fix, the test itself still fails: conflicting_symbol isn't in the
debug info nor the export table, and Windows binaries don't have an equivalent
of the ELF .symtab. We need to understand why the test works to keep the
symbol out of the debug info. In the mean time, having the test fail at this
point is a better indication of the remaining problem than a build error.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43688
llvm-svn: 326130
Summary:
The command takes two input arguments: a module to use as a debug target
and a file containing a list of commands. The command will execute each
of the breakpoint commands in the file and dump the breakpoint state
after each one.
The commands are expected to be breakpoint set/remove/etc. commands, but
I explicitly allow any lldb command here, so you can do things like
change setting which impact breakpoint resolution, etc. There is also a
"-persistent" flag, which causes lldb-test to *not* automatically clear
the breakpoint list after each command. Right now I don't use it, but
the idea behind it was that it could be used to test more complex
combinations of breakpoint commands (set+modify, set+disable, etc.).
Right now the command prints out only the basic breakpoint state, but
more information can be easily added there. To enable easy matching of
the "at least one breakpoint location found" state, the command
explicitly prints out the string "At least one breakpoint location.".
To enable testing of breakpoints set with an absolute paths, I add the
ability to perform rudimentary substitutions on the commands: right now
the string %p is replaced by the directory which contains the command
file (so, under normal circumstances, this will perform the same
substitution as lit would do for %p).
I use this command to rewrite the TestBreakpointCaseSensitivity test --
the test was checking about a dozen breakpoint commands, but it was
launching a new process for each one, so it took about 90 seconds to
run. The new test takes about 0.3 seconds for me, which is approximately
a 300x speedup.
Reviewers: davide, zturner, jingham
Subscribers: luporl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43686
llvm-svn: 326112
Summary:
The llvm function is equivalent to this one. Where possible I tried to
replace const char* with llvm::StringRef to avoid extra strlen
computations. In most places, I was able to track the c string back to
the ConstString it was created from.
I also create a test that verifies we are able to lookup names with
unicode characters, as a bug in the llvm compiler (it accidentally used
a different hash function) meant this was not working until recently.
This also removes the unused ExportTable class.
Reviewers: aprantl, davide
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43596
llvm-svn: 325927
Summary:
Potentially due to the recent testuite refactorings, this test now reports
a full absolute path but expect just the filename. For some reason this
test is skipped on GreenDragon so we've never seen the issue.
Reviewers: vsk
Subscribers: kubamracek, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43577
llvm-svn: 325859
Summary:
This test launches a helper that uses the debugserver. The environment
variable sepcifying the debug server wasn't passed to this helper, thus
it was using the default one.
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43546
llvm-svn: 325858
This test was only testing that clang produced the correct informations
for __apple accelerated tables. So, it's a clang test. Also, it
doesn't require any debugger intervention, the object file can
be analyzed statically with a dumper. Also, the input program
was highly verbose (unnecessarily).
r325850 commits a clang test instead, so it's time to retire this.
llvm-svn: 325851
The header file for the DLL tried to declare inline functions and a local
function as dllexport which broke the compile and link. Removing the bad
declarations solves the problem, and the test passes on Windows now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43600
llvm-svn: 325836
Ensure that the test data is an array of bytes rather than a string that gets
encoded differently between Python 2 and Python 3.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43532
llvm-svn: 325835
Summary:
This test was failing on Windows because it expected the breakpoint in the
dynamic library to be resolved before the process is launched. Since the DLL
isn't loaded until the process is launched this didn't work.
The fix creates a special value (-2) for num_expected_locations that ignores
the actual number of breakpoint locations found.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda
Subscribers: sanjoy, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43419
llvm-svn: 325704
The patch added an extra argument to the append_to_process_working_directory
function. I have somehow missed updating this test, and it did not show up
because the code was only run in remote mode.
llvm-svn: 325702
Summary:
These were not being flaky, but they're still making the tree dirty.
These tests were using lldbutil.append_to_process_working_directory to
derive the file path so I fix them by modifying the function to return
the build directory for local tests.
Technically, now the path returned by this function does not point to
the process working directory for local tests, but I think it makes
sense to keep the function name, as I think we should move towards
launching the process in the build directory (and I intend to change
this for the handful of inferiors that actually care about their PWD,
for example because they need to create files there).
Reviewers: davide, aprantl
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43506
llvm-svn: 325690
This test was accessing self.debug_info, which doesn't exist anymore. For
some reason the macOS bots are skipping this test because they think the
compiler is not clang. We'll look into this separately.
llvm-svn: 325666
Summary:
The paralelization patch exposed a bunch of cases where we were still
touching the source tree (as these tests were now stepping on each
others toes and being flaky).
This patch removes such issues from breakpoint command tests. Since the
only reason they were creating files was to indirectly test whether the
breakpoint commands got executed (and plumbing the full build tree path
to all places that needed it would be messy) I decided to modify the
tests to check for a different side effect instead: modification of a
global variable. This also makes the code simpler as checking the value
of the global variable is easier, and there is nothing to clean up.
As the tests aren't really doing anything debug-info related, I took the
opportunity to also mark them as NO_DEBUG_INFO_TESTCASEs.
Reviewers: jingham, aprantl
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43464
llvm-svn: 325570
The first issue is about the flaky test rerun logic. This was grouping
tests by subdir and passing them into walk_and_invoke in the incorrect
form. This part can be just deleted as its not needed anymore.
The second problem (which I noticed while investigating the first one)
was that the "-p" switch was not working in multiprocessing mode. This
happened because we were returning None from process_file instead of a
tuple full of empty values for tests that did not match the -p regex.
Both of these would be caught earlier if python was a more strongly
typed language. :/
llvm-svn: 325519
Summary:
This adds a SBDebugger::GetBuildConfiguration static function, which
returns a SBStructuredData describing the the build parameters of
liblldb. Right now, it just contains one entry: whether we were built
with XML support.
I use the new functionality to skip a test which requires XML support,
but concievably the new function could be useful to other liblldb
clients as well (making sure the library supports the feature they are
about to use).
Reviewers: zturner, jingham, clayborg, davide
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43333
llvm-svn: 325504
These were missed in the great refactor because they were added
concurrently with it. Since we started running tests in a more parallel
fashion they started to be flaky. This should fix it.
Now that we are no longer polluting the source tree, I also delete the
bit of custom cleanup code specific to these tests.
llvm-svn: 325495
The test was generating long unix socket names, and the addition of a
new folder in the previous patch pushed it over the limit (although
linux has a fairly generous limit for path names, this does not apply to
unix sockets).
Modify the test to use a shorter name instead.
llvm-svn: 325340
The reason this test was disabled is no longer relevant. However, it
didn't turn into an unexpected success because of a syntax error in the
test itself. This commit fixes that and re-enables the test.
llvm-svn: 325339
Since we now can run multiple tests from the same directory at once, we
need to include the test name in the remote test directory instead.
I'm not sure if the test_number in the remote path is necessary anymore
(or even if it was ever necessary), but I choose to leave it in for now.
llvm-svn: 325334
Summary:
Due to in-tree builds, we were parallelizing the tests at the directory
level. Now that the tests are built out-of-tree, we can remove this
limitation and paralelize at file level instead.
This decreases test suite time by about 10% for me, which is not
world-shattering, but it makes the code slightly simpler and will also
allow us to merge tests which were artificially spread over multiple
folders (TestConcurrentEvents...) to work-around this limitation.
To make this work, I've also needed to include the test file name in the
build directory name, as just the test method name is not unique enough
(plenty of tests have a test method called "test" or similar).
While doing this, I've found a couple of tests that are taking waaay longer then
they ought to (TestBreakpointCaseSensitivity -- 90 seconds), which I plan to
look into in the future.
Reviewers: aprantl
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43335
llvm-svn: 325322
This test uses XML packets, but libxml is an optional dependency of
lldb, and this test fails if it is not present.
I'm leaving this enabled on mac, as thats the only platform that's
likely to have libxml always available, but ideally we should have a way
to skip this based on build configuration. I'll see if I can whip
something like that up soon, but for the time being, this unblocks the
buildbots.
llvm-svn: 324870
arch incompat with spec in file so it's rejected and the test fails.
will look into this later, will be a test case issue not a test issue;
test case may only be valid when lldb is built for/running on an x86_64
system.
llvm-svn: 324795
This patch makes LLDB's clang module cache path customizable via
settings set target.clang-modules-cache-path <path> and uses it in the
LLDB testsuite to reuse the same location inside the build directory
for LLDB and clang.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43099
llvm-svn: 324775
This only worked on MacOS, which now ships a newer version of
python without this bug. As such, we don't leak the fd, and
this test is not needed anymore (as it also hardcoded the python
version in the check).
llvm-svn: 324743
Summary:
Update makefiles to specify -fPIC in Makefile.rules and only throw -fPIC when building a shared library. This change is necessary to allow building the lldb tests on Windows where -fPIC is not a valid option.
Update a few places to Python 3.x syntax
Reviewers: zturner, lldb-commits
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: stella.stamenova, labath, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42994
llvm-svn: 324671
Summary:
The test was trying to reproduce a bug in handling of two concurrent
events, which was impossible to do reliably in a black-box style test.
In practice, this meant the test was only ever failing on remote
targets, as these were slow enough to trigger this.
Fortunately, we now have the ability to mock the server side of the
connection, which means we can simulate the failure deterministically,
so I rewrite the test to use the new gdb-client framework.
I've needed to add a couple of new packets to the mock server to be able
to do this. Instead of trying to guess how a "typical" gdb-client test
will want to handle this, I throw an exception in the implementation to
force the user to override them (the packets are only sent if the test
explicitly performs some action which will trigger them, so a basic test
which e.g. does not need the "continue" functionality will not need to
implement them).
Reviewers: owenpshaw
Subscribers: srhines, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42959
llvm-svn: 324590
The change in r324488 dropped the existing category attribute in for
instance methods. This patch corrects that.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43024
llvm-svn: 324492
Inlined tests have a test function that is actually an instance method,
which requires a slightly different approach when it comes to setting
the category attribute. The attribute must be set on the actual
function, rather than on a particular instance.
llvm-svn: 324488
This patch creates a <test>.dwarf, <test>.dwo, etc., build directory for each testcase variant.
Most importantly, this eliminates the need for the per-test lock file in the source directory.
Tests that are marked as NO_DEBUG_INFO_TESTCASE and build with
buildDefault() are built in a <test>.default build directory.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42763
llvm-svn: 324368
We've had a bug (fixed by https://reviews.llvm.org/D42828) where the
thread name was being read incorrectly. Add a test for this behavior.
llvm-svn: 324230
This test was marked as an expected failure because of PR20231 but it
seems to consistently result in an unexpected success across the bots.
Let's try to re-enable this test again.
llvm-svn: 324227
Summary:
This changes the way we store the debug info variant to make it
available earlier in the test bringup: instead of it being set by the
test wrapper method, it is set as a *property* of the wrapper method.
This way, we can inspect it as soon as self.testMethodName is
initialized. The retrieval is implemented by a new function
TestBase.getDebugInfo(), and all that's necessary to make it work is to
change self.debug_info into self.getDebugInfo().
While searching for debug_info occurences i noticed that TestLogging is
being replicated for no good reason, so I removed the replication there.
Reviewers: aprantl, jingham
Subscribers: eraman, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42836
llvm-svn: 324226
I have found LLDB cannot find separate debug info of Fedora /usr/bin/gdb.
It is because:
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 14 Jan 25 20:41 /usr/bin/gdb -> ../libexec/gdb*
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 10180296 Jan 25 20:41 /usr/libexec/gdb*
ls: cannot access '/usr/lib/debug/usr/bin/gdb-8.0.1-35.fc27.x86_64.debug': No such file or directory
-r--r--r-- 1 root root 29200464 Jan 25 20:41 /usr/lib/debug/usr/libexec/gdb-8.0.1-35.fc27.x86_64.debug
FYI that -8.0.1-35.fc27.x86_64.debug may look confusing, it was always just
.debug before.
Why is /usr/bin/gdb a symlink is offtopic for this bugreport, Fedora has it so
for some reasons.
It is always safest to look at the .debug file only after resolving all
symlinks on the binary file.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42853
llvm-svn: 324224
I have found the lookup by build-id
(when lookup by /usr/lib/debug/path/name/exec.debug failed) does not work as
LLDB tries the build-id hex string in uppercase but Fedora uses lowercase.
xubuntu-16.10 also uses lowercase during my test:
/usr/lib/debug/.build-id/6c/61f3566329f43d03f812ae7057e9e7391b5ff6.debug
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42852
llvm-svn: 324222
LLDB queries Spotlight to locate .dSYM bundles based on the UUID
embedded in a binary, and because the UUID is a hash of filename and
.text section, there *will* be conflicts inside $BUILD_DIR.
This should fix the broken green dragon bots.
llvm-svn: 324019
Using the "run_to_{source,name}_breakpoint will allow us to remove
a lot of boiler-plate from the testsuite. We mostly use source
breakpoints, but some tests use by name ones so this was needed.
llvm-svn: 324010
The mock server was sending acks back in response to spurious acks from
the client, but the client was not prepared to handle these. Most of the
time this would work because the only time the client was sending
unsolicited acks is after the initial connection, and there reply-ack
would get ignored in the "flush all packets from the server" loop which
came after the ack. However, this loop had only a 10ms delay, and
sometimes this was not enough to catch the reply (which meant the
connection got out of sync, and test failed).
Since this behavior not consistent with how lldb-server handles this
situation (it just ignores the ack), I fix the mock server to do the
same.
llvm-svn: 323953
We started passing the "all" target to make, which rendered the
"localall" trick in this Makefile inoperable.
I implement the strip step differently, and also reformat the Makefile.
llvm-svn: 323855
Initialize the default value of SymbolFileDWARF uuid with
the appropriately shifted DW_INVALID_OFFSET constant.
This change fixes the collision in the computation of DIE uid
(inside DIERef::GetUID) and incorrect CompileUnit lookup
(because of the misleading cu_offset value).
Test plan: make check-lldb
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42563
llvm-svn: 323832
This patch is the result of a discussion on lldb-dev, see
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2018-January/013111.html for
background.
For each test (should be eventually: each test configuration) a
separate build directory is created and we execute
make VPATH=$srcdir/path/to/test -C $builddir/path/to/test -f $srcdir/path/to/test/Makefile -I $srcdir/path/to/test
In order to make this work all LLDB tests need to be updated to find
the executable in the test build directory, since CWD still points at
the test's source directory, which is a requirement for unittest2.
Although we have done extensive testing, I'm expecting that this first
attempt will break a few bots. Please DO NOT HESITATE TO REVERT this
patch in order to get the bots green again. We will likely have to
iterate on this some more.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42281
llvm-svn: 323803
The logic was incorrect because on windows, we need to look for
yaml2obj.EXE. I implement the search in terms of
distutils.spawn.find_executable, which should handle the platform
differences for us.
llvm-svn: 323744
Summary:
Adds new utilities that make it easier to write test cases for lldb acting as a client over a gdb-remote connection.
- A GDBRemoteTestBase class that starts a mock GDB server and provides an easy way to check client packets
- A MockGDBServer that, via MockGDBServerResponder, can be made to issue server responses that test client behavior.
- Utility functions for handling common data encoding/decoding
- Utility functions for creating dummy targets from YAML files
----
Split from the review at https://reviews.llvm.org/D42145, which was a new feature that necessitated the new testing capabilities.
Reviewers: clayborg, labath
Reviewed By: clayborg, labath
Subscribers: hintonda, davide, jingham, krytarowski, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42195
Patch by Owen Shaw <llvm@owenpshaw.net>
llvm-svn: 323636
Now the function returns `False`, and the caller can take the
appropriate action (in this case, for --executable, reporting
that the file doesn't exist).
llvm-svn: 323566
TestLibcxxListLoop - fails because the evil "define private public"
trick does not work with gmodules. The purpose of the test is not to
test debug info parsing so I just mark it as no_debug_info_testcase.
In the long term it may be interesting to write a mock std::list which
will allow us to test bad inputs to data formatters more easily.
TestGModules - seems to be a genuine bug. Filed pr36107 and xfailed.
llvm-svn: 323520
This test #include's stdio.h, which, on at least two bots results in a
module import of MacTypes.h (due to weird SDK layering issues), which
causes the test to fail to compile.
Just don't #include stdio.h, as it's not needed for the test.
llvm-svn: 323467
Stale global module caches cause problems for the bots. The modules
become invalid when clang headers are updated by version control, and
tests which use these modules fail to compile, e.g:
fatal error: file '.../__stddef_max_align_t.h' has been modified since the module file '/var/.../Darwin.pcm' was built
note: please rebuild precompiled header '/var/.../Darwin.pcm'
Eventually we should transition to having just a single module cache to speed
tests up. This patch should be just enough to fix the spurious bot failures due
to stale caches.
rdar://36479805, also related to llvm.org/PR36048
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42277
llvm-svn: 323450
building method override tables for CXXMethodDecls in
DWARFASTParserClang::CompleteTypeFromDWARF.
C++ virtual method calls in LLDB expressions may fail if the override table for
the method being called is not correct as IRGen will produce references to the
wrong (or a missing) vtable entry.
This patch does not fix calls to virtual methods with covariant return types as
it mistakenly treats these as overloads, rather than overrides. This will be
addressed in a future patch.
Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41997
Partially fixes <rdar://problem/14205774>
llvm-svn: 323163
Due to an unfortunate difference between the open source test harness
and our internal harness, applying two @skip... decorators to this test
works in the internal build but not in the open source build.
I've tried another approach to skipping this test and tested it out with
the open source harness. Hopefully this sticks!
rdar://36417163
llvm-svn: 322756
This test frequently times out on our bots. While we're investigating
the issue, mark the test as skipped so the builds aren't impacted as
much.
rdar://36417163
llvm-svn: 322728
RemoveInvalidLocations was clearing out the m_locations in the
breakpoint by hand, and it wasn't also clearing the locations from
the address->location map, which confused us when we went to update
breakpoint locations.
I also made Breakpoint::ModulesChanged check the Location's Section
to make sure it hadn't been deleted. This shouldn't strictly be necessary,
but if the DynamicLoaderPlugin doesn't do it's job right (I'm looking at
you new Darwin DynamicLoader...) then it can end up leaving stale locations
on rerun. It doesn't hurt to clean them up here as a backstop.
<rdar://problem/36134350>
llvm-svn: 322348
This test stresses expression evaluation support for template functions.
Currently the support is rudimentary, and running this test causes assertion
failures in clang. This test cannot be XFAIL'ed because the test harness
treats assertion failures as unexpected events. For now, the test must be
skipped.
llvm-svn: 322340
When rendezvous structure is not initialized we need to set up
rendezvous breakpoint anyway. In this case the code will locate
dynamic loader (interpreter) and look for known function names.
This is r322209, but with fixed VDSO loading fixed.
Bug: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=25806
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41533
llvm-svn: 322251
When rendezvous structure is not initialized we need to set up
rendezvous breakpoint anyway. In this case the code will locate
dynamic loader (interpreter) and look for known function names.
Bug: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=25806
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41533
llvm-svn: 322209
Summary:
There was some confusion in the code about how to represent process
environment. Most of the code (ab)used the Args class for this purpose,
but some of it used a more basic StringList class instead. In either
case, the fact that the underlying abstraction did not provide primitive
operations for the typical environment operations meant that even a
simple operation like checking for an environment variable value was
several lines of code.
This patch adds a separate Environment class, which is essentialy a
llvm::StringMap<std::string> in disguise. To standard StringMap
functionality, it adds a couple of new functions, which are specific to
the environment use case:
- (most important) envp conversion for passing into execve() and likes.
Instead of trying to maintain a constantly up-to-date envp view, it
provides a function which creates a envp view on demand, with the
expectation that this will be called as the very last thing before
handing the value to the system function.
- insert(StringRef KeyEqValue) - splits KeyEqValue into (key, value)
pair and inserts it into the environment map.
- compose(value_type KeyValue) - takes a map entry and converts in back
into "KEY=VALUE" representation.
With this interface most of the environment-manipulating code becomes
one-liners. The only tricky part was maintaining compatibility in
SBLaunchInfo, which expects that the environment entries are accessible
by index and that the returned const char* is backed by the launch info
object (random access into maps is hard and the map stores the entry in
a deconstructed form, so we cannot just return a .c_str() value). To
solve this, I have the SBLaunchInfo convert the environment into the
"envp" form, and use it to answer the environment queries. Extra code is
added to make sure the envp version is always in sync.
(This also improves the layering situation as Args was in the Interpreter module
whereas Environment is in Utility.)
Reviewers: zturner, davide, jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41359
llvm-svn: 322174
Summary:
This used to be important when all tests were run in a single process,
but that has no longer been the case for a while. Furthermore, this hook fails
to build on new mac versions for several people, and it's not clear
whether fixing it is worth the effort.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg, davide
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41871
llvm-svn: 322167
This fixes a bug in -gmodules DWARF handling when debugging without a .dSYM bundle
that was particularly noticable when debugging LLVM itself.
Debugging without clang modules and DWO handling should be unaffected by this patch.
<rdar://problem/32436209>
llvm-svn: 321802
The test works fine on linux, and I believe other targets should not
have an issue with as well. If they do, we can start blacklisting
instead of whitelisting.
The idea of using "-1" as the value of the pointer on non-apple targets
backfired, as it fails the "address != LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS" test (-1 is
the value of LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS). However, it should be safe to use
0x100 for other targets as well. The first page of memory is generally
kept unreadable to catch null pointer dereferences.
llvm-svn: 321353
an empty Python string object when it reads a 0-length
string out of memory (and a successful SBError object).
<rdar://problem/26186692>
llvm-svn: 321338
Two tests were failing because the debugger was picking up multiply
defined internal symbols from the system libraries. This is a bug, as
there should be no ambiguity because the tests are defining variables
with should shadow these symbols, but lldb is not smart enough to figure
that out.
I work around the issue by renaming the variables in these tests, and in
exchange I create a self-contained test which reproduces the issue
without depending on the system libraries.
This increases the predictability of our test suite.
llvm-svn: 321271
"Default" is a valid QoS for a thread on older versions of macOS,
like the one installed in the bot.
Thanks to Jason Molenda for helping me figuring out the problem.
<rdar://problem/28346273>
llvm-svn: 320883
I tested on x86-64 and Jason on embedded architectures.
This cleans up another couple of reported unexpected successes.
<rdar://problem/28623427>
llvm-svn: 320452
After discussing this with Jim and Jason, I think my commit was
actually sweeping the issue under the carpet rather than fixing it.
I'll take a closer look between tonight and tomorrow.
llvm-svn: 320447
Some tests are failing on macOS when building with the in-tree
clang, and this is because they're conditional on the version released.
Apple releases using a different versioning number, but as these are
conditional on clang < 7, they fail for clang ToT (which is 6.0).
As a general solution, we actually need either a mapping between
Apple internal release version and public ones.
That said, I discussed this with Fred , and Apple Clang 6.0 seems
to be old enough that we can remove this altogether (which means I
can delay implementing the general purpose solution for a bit).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41101
llvm-svn: 320444
This is the first of a series of commits aiming to improve
overall LLDB's hygiene. Feel free to shout at me in case
I break something.
<rdar://problem/30915340>
llvm-svn: 320425
Also add a test. There should also be control for this
in ProcessLaunchInfo and a "target launch" flag, but at least
this will allow you to control it somehow.
<rdar://problem/35842137>
llvm-svn: 319731
Summary:
This flag is on by default for darwin and freebsd, but off for linux.
Without it, clang will sometimes not emit debug info for types like
std::string. Whether it does this, and which tests will fail because of
that depends on the linux distro and c++ library version.
A bunch of tests were already setting these flags manually, but here
instead I take a whole sale approach and enable this flag for all tests.
Any test which does not want to have this flag (right now we have one
such test) can turn it off explicitly via
CFLAGS_EXTRAS+=$(LIMIT_DEBUG_INFO_FLAGS)
This fixes a bunch of data formatter tests on red-hat.
Reviewers: davide, jankratochvil
Subscribers: emaste, aprantl, krytarowski, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40717
llvm-svn: 319653
unambiguously on one bit of code. On macOS these
lines mapped to two distinct locations, and that
was artificially throwing off the test.
llvm-svn: 319472
Summary:
New linux kernels (on systems that support the XSAVES instruction) will
not update the inferior registers unless the corresponding flag in the
XSAVE header is set. Normally this flag will be set in our image of the
XSAVE area (since we obtained it from the kernel), but if the inferior
has never used the corresponding register set, the respective flag can
be clear.
This fixes the issue by making sure we explicitly set the flags
corresponding to the registers we modify. I don't try to precisely match
the flags to set on each write, as the rules could get quite complicated
-- I use a simpler over-approximation instead.
This was already caught by test_fp_register_write, but that was only
because the code that ran before main() did not use some of the register
sets. Since nothing in this test relies on being stopped in main(), I
modify the test to stop at the entry point instead, so we can be sure
the inferior did not have a chance to access these registers.
Reviewers: clayborg, valentinagiusti
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40434
llvm-svn: 319161
New android ndk linker started adding more flags to the produced
binaries, which causes older dynamic linkers display warnings to stderr
about unsupported flags. This interferes with our stderr tests.
Extend the hasChattyStderr function to catch these targets as well.
llvm-svn: 319028
r317561 exposed an interesting bug (pr35228) in handling of simultaneous
watchpoint hits. Disabling the test until we can get that fixed.
llvm-svn: 317683
Summary:
This test was failing in various configurations on linux in a fairly
unpredictible way. The success depended on whether the c++ abi library
was linked in statically or not and how well was the linker able to
strip parts of it. This introduces additional code to the "dummmy" test
executable, which ensures that all parts of the library needed to
evaluate the expressions are always present.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: srhines, tatyana-krasnukha, davide, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39727
llvm-svn: 317678
Summary:
The test incremented an atomic varible to trigger the watchpoint event.
On arm64 this compiled to a ldaxr/stlxr loop, with the watchpoint being
triggered in the middle of the loop. Hitting the watchpoint resets the
exclusive monitor, and forces the process to loop one more time, hitting
the watchpoint again, etc.
While it would be nice if the debugger was able to resume from this
situation, this is not trivial, and is not what this test is about.
Therefore, I propose to change this to a simple store to a normal
variable (which should still trip the watchpoint everywhere, but without
atomic loops) and file a bug to investigate the possibilities of
handling the watchpoints in atomic loops in a more reasonable way.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: aemerson, kristof.beyls, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39680
llvm-svn: 317561
Summary: These fail because `-fPIC` is not supported on Windows.
Reviewers: zturner, jingham, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39692
llvm-svn: 317529
Summary:
This mechanism was mostly redundant with the file-based .categories
mechanism, and it was interfering with it, as any test which implemented
a getCategories method would not inherit the filesystem categories.
This patch removes it. The existing categories are preserved either by
adding a .categories file, or using the @add_test_categories decorator.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39515
llvm-svn: 317277
Now that the wathpoint tests have their own category, we can easily skip
them on devices which don't have watchpoint support. Therefore, we don't
need an android xfail on each of these tests.
llvm-svn: 317276
SetOututFileHandle to work with IOBase.
I did make one change after checking with Larry --
I renamed SBDebugger::Flush to FlushDebuggerOutputHandles
and added a short docstring to the .i file to make it
a little clearer under which context programs may need
to use this API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39128
<rdar://problem/34870417>
llvm-svn: 317182
dwarf&dwo versions were doing it, but gmodules and dsym weren't. All
this function does right now is pass OS=Android to make when targeting
android. This enables us to run dotest without manually passing --env
OS=Android.
llvm-svn: 317130
Summary:
std::queue is just a fancy wrapper around another container, so all we
need to do is to delegate to the it.
Reviewers: jingham, EricWF
Subscribers: srhines, mgorny, lldb-commits, eugene
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35666
llvm-svn: 317099
Most of the watchpoint tests are organized into subtrees, so we can use the
file-based .categories approach to annotate them. The exception are the
concurrent_events tests, which needed to be annotated on a per-test basis.
The motivation behind this is to provide an easy way to disable watchpoint
tests on systems where the watchpoint functionality is not present/unreliable.
llvm-svn: 317004
Summary:
This adds a data formatter for the implementation of forward_list in
libc++. I've refactored the existing std::list data formatter a bit to
enable more sharing of code (mainly the loop detection stuff).
Reviewers: jingham, EricWF
Subscribers: srhines, eugene, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35556
llvm-svn: 316992
Unified headers will be the only way to build applications in NDK r16,
and it also works with NDK r15.
This also bumps the minimum supported android version to 16.
llvm-svn: 316985
this test was using a single makefile to build two executables. This
setup, although not supported by Makefile.rules, happened to
work in most configurations, except when building with the android ndk
r16.
Here I move the building of the second executable to a separate
makefile, which is the solution other tests use for multiple targets.
llvm-svn: 316982
The test was asserting that we can only find one frame in the minidump.
Now that we have the default unwind plan from the ABI plugin, we are
able to find 5 more frames using the frame pointer chaining. Correct the
expectation in the test.
llvm-svn: 316688
This creates a new Architecture plugin and moves the stop info override
callback to this place. The motivation for this is to remove complex
dependencies from the ArchSpec class because it is used in a lot of
places that (should) know nothing about Process instances and StopInfo
objects.
I also add a test for the functionality covered by the override
callback.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31172
llvm-svn: 316609
The commit breaks the case where you specify just a filename to the
compiler. Previously, it would look up the compiler in your path, now it
complains that the compiler is not found. One of the lldb buildbots is
depending on this. It seems like a nice feature to have, as it means
less typing and being able to avoid hard-coding the system compiler path
in the bot config.
This reverts commit r316393.
llvm-svn: 316451
If you pass an invalid compiler/debugger path on the cmdline to `dotest.py` this is what you get.
Traceback (most recent call last):
[...]
File "dotest.py", line 7, in <module>
lldbsuite.test.run_suite()
[...]
And with the patch applied:
/home/davide/work/build-lldb/bin/clandasfasg is not a valid path, exiting
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39199
llvm-svn: 316393
Since the ipv6 patch, we've experienced occasional flakyness in
lldb-server tests. This was due to the fact that lldb-server was trying
to listen on both v4 and v6 localhost sockets (and consider it a success
if at least one of them succeeded), while the test framework was only
trying to connect to the v4 one.
This change makes sure lldb-server only listens on the v4 socket.
llvm-svn: 316391
The core of this change is the new CommandInterpreter::m_command_state,
which models the state transitions for interactive commands, including
an "interrupted" state transition.
In general, command interruption requires cooperation from the code
executing the command, which needs to poll for interruption requests
through CommandInterpreter::WasInterrupted().
CommandInterpreter::PrintCommandOutput() implements an optionally
interruptible printing of the command output, which for large outputs
was likely the longest blocking part.
(ex. target modules dump symtab on a complex binary could take 10+ minutes)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37923
llvm-svn: 315037
running watchos. These tests cannot run on normal customer devices,
but I hope to some day have a public facing bot running against a
device.
llvm-svn: 314355
in TestDataFormatterSkipSummary.py - I'm building this test
with the default c++ library.
Skip TestMTCSimple.py when running for i386.
llvm-svn: 314155
Normal customer devices won't be able to run these tests, we're hoping to get
a public facing bot set up at some point. Both devices pass the testsuite without
any errors or failures.
I have seen some instability with the armv7 test runs, I may submit additional patches
to address this. arm64 looks good.
I'll be watching the bots for the rest of today; if any problems are introduced by
this patch I'll revert it - if anyone sees a problem with their bot that I don't
see, please do the same. I know it's a rather large patch.
One change I had to make specifically for iOS devices was that debugserver can't
create files. There were several tests that launch the inferior process redirecting
its output to a file, then they retrieve the file. They were not trying to test
file redirection in these tests, so I rewrote those to write their output to a file
directly.
llvm-svn: 314132
Normal customer devices won't be able to run these devices, we're hoping to get
a public facing bot set up at some point. Both devices pass the testsuite without
any errors or failures.
I have seen some instability with the armv7 test runs, I may submit additional patches
to address this. arm64 looks good.
I'll be watching the bots for the rest of today; if any problems are introduced by
this patch I'll revert it - if anyone sees a problem with their bot that I don't
see, please do the same. I know it's a rather large patch.
One change I had to make specifically for iOS devices was that debugserver can't
create files. There were several tests that launch the inferior process redirecting
its output to a file, then they retrieve the file. They were not trying to test
file redirection in these tests, so I rewrote those to write their output to a file
directly.
llvm-svn: 314038
Normal customer devices won't be able to run these devices, we're hoping to get
a public facing bot set up at some point.
There will be some smaller follow-on patches. The changes to tools/lldb-server are
verbose and I'm not thrilled with having to skip all of these tests manually.
There are a few places where I'm making the assumption that "armv7", "armv7k", "arm64"
means it's an ios device, and I need to review & clean these up with an OS check
as well. (Android will show up as "arm" and "aarch64" so by pure luck they shouldn't
cause problems, but it's not an assumption I want to rely on).
I'll be watching the bots for the rest of today; if any problems are introduced by
this patch I'll revert it - if anyone sees a problem with their bot that I don't
see, please do the same. I know it's a rather large patch.
One change I had to make specifically for iOS devices was that debugserver can't
create files. There were several tests that launch the inferior process redirecting
its output to a file, then they retrieve the file. They were not trying to test
file redirection in these tests, so I rewrote those to write their output to a file
directly.
llvm-svn: 313932
The main change is to avoid setting the process state as running when
debugging core/minidumps (details in the bug). Also included a few small,
related fixes around how the errors propagate in this case.
Fixed the FreeBSD/Windows break: the intention was to keep
Process::WillResume() and Process::DoResume() "in-sync", but this had the
unfortunate consequence of breaking Process sub-classes which don't override
WillResume().
The safer approach is to keep Process::WillResume() untouched and only
override it in the minidump and core implementations.
patch by lemo
Bug: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34532
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37651
llvm-svn: 313655
When introduced, breakpoint names were just tags that you could
apply to breakpoints that would allow you to refer to a breakpoint
when you couldn't capture the ID, or to refer to a collection of
breakpoints.
This change makes the names independent holders of breakpoint options
that you can then apply to breakpoints when you add the name to the
breakpoint. It adds the "breakpoint name configure" command to set
up or reconfigure breakpoint names. There is also full support for
then in the SB API, including a new SBBreakpointName class.
The connection between the name and the breakpoints
sharing the name remains live, so if you reconfigure the name, all the
breakpoint options all change as well. This allows a quick way
to share complex breakpoint behavior among a bunch of breakpoints, and
a convenient way to iterate on the set.
You can also create a name from a breakpoint, allowing a quick way
to copy options from one breakpoint to another.
I also added the ability to make hidden and delete/disable protected
names. When applied to a breakpoint, you will only be able to list,
delete or disable that breakpoint if you refer to it explicitly by ID.
This feature will allow GUI's that need to use breakpoints for their
own purposes to keep their breakpoints from getting accidentally
disabled or deleted.
<rdar://problem/22094452>
llvm-svn: 313292
The auto-continue test was using the new (better) name
for providing commands (-C) but I haven't checked in that change
yet. Put the test back to the old way for now.
llvm-svn: 313221
The main change is to avoid setting the process state as running when
debugging core/minidumps (details in the bug).
Also included a few small, related fixes around how the errors propagate in
this case.
patch by lemo
Bug: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34532
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37651
llvm-svn: 313210
On Windows a process can't delete its own current direcotry, that's why the test
needs to return to the original direcotry before removing newdir.
llvm-svn: 313113
Summary:
Test was skipped because -data-evaluate-expression was thought
to not work on globals. This is not the case - the issue was clang
removes debug info for globals in cpp files that are not used.
Add a reference to the globals in question, and fix memory patter in
test to match memory pattern in testcase.
Reviewers: ki.stfu, abidh
Reviewed By: ki.stfu
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37533
llvm-svn: 312726
The FXSAVE member `ftw` (FPU Tag Word) was given the wrong size (8-bit)
instead of the correct width (16-bit) as per the x87 Programmer's
Manual. Adjust this to ensure that we print out the complete value for
the register.
llvm-svn: 311579
The Linux xfail decorator was removed in r272326 with the claim that the
test "runs reliably on the linux x86 buildbot." It also runs reliably on
FreeBSD for me.
llvm.org/pr25925
llvm-svn: 310644
This test is consistently reporting unexpected pass for me on FreeBSD
10 and 12. It was failing on the old FreeBSD buildbot which has now been
retired for some time. Will investigate further if this fails once a new
buildbot is configured and running tests.
llvm.org/pr17807
llvm-svn: 310626
This is the FreeBSD equivalent of r238549.
This serves 2 purposes:
* LLDB should handle inferior process signals SIGSEGV/SIGILL/SIGBUS/
SIGFPE the way it is suppose to be handled. Prior to this fix these
signals will neither create a coredump, nor exit from the debugger
or work for signal handling scenario.
* eInvalidCrashReason need not report "unknown crash reason" if we have
a valid si_signo
llvm.org/pr23699
Patch by Karnajit Wangkhem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35223
llvm-svn: 310591
Summary:
The available platform list was previously only accessible via the
`platform list` command, this patch makes it possible to access that
list via the SBDebugger API. The active platform list has likewise
been exposed via the SBDebugger API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35760
llvm-svn: 310452
You can get a breakpoint to auto-continue by adding "continue"
as a command, but that has the disadvantage that if you hit two
breakpoints simultaneously, the continue will force the process
to continue, and maybe even forstalling the commands on the other.
The auto-continue flag means the breakpoints can negotiate about
whether to stop.
Writing tests, I wanted to supply some commands when I made the
breakpoints, so I also added that ability.
llvm-svn: 309969
When an option was set at on a location, I was just copying the whole option set
to the location, and letting it shadow the breakpoint options. That was wrong since
it meant changes to unrelated options on the breakpoint would no longer take on this
location. I added a mask of set options and use that for option propagation.
I also added a "location" property to breakpoints, and added SBBreakpointLocation.{G,S}etCommandLineCommands
since I wanted to use them to write some more test cases.
<rdar://problem/24397798>
llvm-svn: 309772
Summary:
Implement SBProcessInfo to wrap lldb_private::ProcessInstanceInfo,
and add SBProcess::GetProcessInfo() to retrieve info like parent ID,
group ID, user ID etc. from a live process.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35881
llvm-svn: 309664
Now -shlib flag can be provided alongside with names of symbols files:
(lldb) target symbols add --shlib stripper-lib.so unstripper-lib.so
This is helpful when default matching mechanisms by name and UUID
can't find a module, and the user needs to explicitly specify
which module the given symbol file belongs to.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35607
llvm-svn: 308933
This reapplies https://reviews.llvm.org/D35740 with a tweak to find
the section by name rather than type. Section types don't distinguish
between regular sections and their DWO counterparts.
llvm-svn: 308905
The DWO handling code can get confused by clang modules which also use
skeleton CUs to point to the object file with the full debug
info. This patch detects whether an object is a "real" DWO or a clang
module and prevents LLDB from interpreting clang modules as DWO. This
fixes the regression in TestWithModuleDebugging.
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=33875
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35740
llvm-svn: 308850
Summary:
SBBreakpointLocation exposed the ignore count, but didn't expose
the hit count. Both values were exposed by SBBreakpoint and
SBWatchpoint, so this makes things a bit more consistent.
Reviewers: lldb-commits
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31283
llvm-svn: 308480
In NativeProcessLinux::MonitorSIGTRAP we were asserting that the si_code
value is one of the codes we know about. However, that list was very
incomplete -- for example, we were not handling SI_TKILL/SI_USER,
generated by raise(SIGTRAP). A cursory examination show there are at
least a dozen codes like these that an app can generate, and more can be
added at any point.
So, instead of trying to play catchup, I change the default behavior to
treat an unknown si_code like an ordinary signal. The only reason we
needed to inspect si_code in the first place is because
watchpoint/breakpoints are notified as SIGTRAP, but we already know
about those, and us starting to use a new debug event is far less likely
than somebody introducing a new non-debug event.
I add a test case to TestRaise to verify we are handling raise(SIGTRAP)
in an application properly.
llvm-svn: 307644
Starting with android ndk r15, clang much more tests are affected by the
-mstackrealign bugl (now nearly all functions are affected, and not just
the ones requiring 16-byte alignment). Due to their numbers, Xfailing
all of them is not a viable option, so we will just have to declare this
configuration unsupported, and wait until ndk ships a clang version that
has this bug fixed.
llvm-svn: 307252
to make a target, set a source regex breakpoint, run to
the breakpoint and find the thread that hit the breakpoint.
Start the process of replacing the boiler plate with this
routine.
llvm-svn: 307234
This adds a simple testcase for MainThreadCheckerRuntime. The tool (Main Thread Checker) is only available on Darwin, so the test also detects the presence of libMainThreadChecker.dylib and is skipped if the tool is not available.
llvm-svn: 307170
All android builds systems have switched to -mstackrealign for building
x86 binaries, so follow their cue with our mini build system.
This presently breaks just one test (TestReturnValue), and this is due
to a compiler bug, which has already been fixed in clang, but it hasn't
made it yet into the official NDK compiler. While I'm touching that
test, I also remove an android-specific XFAIL, which is not relevant
anymore.
llvm-svn: 306683
components to not depend on "." characters in the fileanme
(e.g. "Foundation.framework") but instead to just use path
separators. The names of the files themselves may have dots
in them ("com.apple.sbd") which would break the old scheme.
Also add a test case for this (macosx/find-dsym/bundle-with-dot-in-filename)
as well as a test case for r304520 (macosx/find-dsym/deep-bundle)
which needed a similar setup to test correctly on a single machine.
(both of these are really testing remote debug session situations
where the binary can't be found on the system where lldb is running,
complicating the test case a bit.)
<rdar://problem/31825940>
llvm-svn: 305441
NSString is loaded from the DWARF, which doesn't have the concept of protocols.
When this is used with the NSMutableDictionary type from Objective-C modules,
this produces errors of the form
error: cannot initialize a parameter of type 'id<NSCopying> _Nonnull' with an rvalue of type 'NSString *'
We're aware of these problems and have an internal bug report filed
(<rdar://problem/32777981>)
llvm-svn: 305424
The step count depends on code generated by compiler (GCC/Clang).
It will also vary for different MIPS arch variant. Hence skipping these test for MIPS.
Subscribers: jaydeep, bhushan, lldb-commits, slthakur
llvm-svn: 305383
Clang does not accept regparm attribute on these platforms.
Fortunately, the default calling convention passes arguments
in registers any way
Subscribers: jaydeep, bhushan, lldb-commits, slthakur
llvm-svn: 305378
This test started being flaky since r303848 (RunThreadPlan: Fix halting
logic in IgnoreBreakpoints = false). I am not reverting that, as I am
confident that actually fixed a problem. A more likely explanation is
that there is still one corner case that is not handled correctly there.
Marking the test as flaky until I get a chance to investigate. I also
mark the test as no-debug-info-dependend -- it stresses expression
evaluation, as far as debug info goes, the test if extremely simple.
llvm-svn: 305286
This patch introduces a new thread backtrace command "unique".
The command is based off of "thread backtrace all" but will instead
find all threads which share matching call stacks and de-duplicate
their output, listing call stack and all the threads which share it.
This is especially useful for apps which use thread/task pools
sitting around waiting for work and cause excessive duplicate output.
I needed this behavior recently when debugging a core with 700+ threads.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33426
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Patch by Brian Gianforcaro <b.gianfo@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 305197
I was over-eager to unable this test in r304976. It still fails in this
combination, at there does not seem to be anything we can do about it,
as the generated code does not preserve the link register.
llvm-svn: 305062
Summary:
When a call instruction is the last instruction in a function, the
backtrace PC will point past the end of the function. We already had
special code to handle that, but we did not handle the case where the PC
ends up outside of the bounds of the module containing the function,
which is a situation that occured in TestNoreturnUnwind on android for
some arch/compiler combinations.
I fix this by adding an argument to Address resolution code which states
that we are ok with addresses pointing to the end of a module/section to
resolve to that module/section.
I create a reproducible test case for this situation by hand-crafting an
executable which has a noreturn function at the end of a module.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32022
llvm-svn: 304976
When parsing types originating in modules, it is possible to encounter AttributedTypes
(such as the type generated for NSString *_Nonnull). Some of LLDB's ClangASTContext
methods deal with them; others do not. In particular, one function that did not was
GetTypeInfo, causing TestObjCNewSyntax to fail.
This fixes that, treating AttributedType as essentially transparent and getting the
information for the modified type.
In addition, however, TestObjCNewSyntax is a monolithic test that verifies a bunch of
different things, all of which can break independently of one another. I broke it
apart into smaller tests so that we get more precise failures when something (like
this) breaks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33812
llvm-svn: 304510
This works on SVN but is a bit fragile on the Swift branch.
I'm adding the test to both, so we have this path covered.
<rdar://problem/32372372>
llvm-svn: 304314
Summary:
- Added API to access data types
-- integer, double, array, string, boolean and dictionary data types
-- Earlier user had to parse through the string output to get these
values
- Added Test cases for API testing
- Added new StructuredDataType enum in public include file
-- Replaced locally-defined enum in StructuredData.h with this new
one
-- Modified other internal files using this locally-defined enum
Signed-off-by: Abhishek Aggarwal <abhishek.a.aggarwal@intel.com>
Reviewers: clayborg, lldb-commits
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33434
llvm-svn: 304138
This is a resubmit of r303732, which was reverted due to a regression.
The original patch caused a regression in TestLoadUnload, which has only showed
up when running the remote test suite. The problem there was that we interrupted
the target just as it has hit the rendezvous breakpoint in the dlopen call. This
meant that the stop reason was set to "breakpoint" even though the event would
not have been broadcast if we had not stopped the process. I fix this by
checking StopInfo->ShouldNotify() before stopping.
I also add a new test for the handling of conditional breakpoints in
expressions, which I noticed to be broken (pr33164)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33283
llvm-svn: 303848
Summary:
The function had logic to handle the case when the expression terminated
while we were trying to halt the process, but it failed to take into
account the possibility that the expression stopped because it hit a
breakpoint. This was caused by the fact that the handling of the stopped
events was duplicated for the "halting" and regular cases (the regular
case handled this situation correctly). I've tried to merge these two
cases into one to make sure they stay in sync.
I should call out that the two cases were checking whether the thread
plan has completed in slightly different ways. I am not sure what is the
difference between them, but I think the check should be the same in
both cases, whatever it is, so I just took the one from the regular
case, as that is probably more tested.
For the test, I modified TestUnwindExpression to run the expression with
a smaller timeout (this is how I found this bug originally). With a 1ms
one thread timeout, the test failed consistently without this patch.
Reviewers: jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33283
llvm-svn: 303732
For remote targets we need to call registerSharedLibrariesWithTarget to
make sure they are installed alongside main executable. This also
required a small fixup in the the mentioned function as in this case
"One" was both a directory name and a library name template. I fixed it
to make sure it checks that the string refers to a file before it
assumed it was a full library path.
llvm-svn: 303248
When it resolves symbol-only variables, the expression parser
currently looks only in the global module list. It should prefer
the current module.
I've fixed that behavior by making it search the current module
first, and only search globally if it finds nothing. I've also
added a test case.
After review, I moved the core of the lookup algorithm into
SymbolContext for use by other code that needs it.
Thanks to Greg Clayton and Pavel Labath for their help.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33083
llvm-svn: 303223
ptr_refs exposed a problem in ClangASTContext's implementation: it
uses an accessor to downcast a QualType to an
ObjCObjectPointerType, but the accessor is not fully general.
getAs() is the safer way to go.
I've added a test case that uses ptr_refs in a way that would
crash before the fix.
<rdar://problem/31363513>
llvm-svn: 303110
as described in pr33042, we cannot reliably retrieve the return value on
arm64 in cases it is returned via x8 pointer. I tried to do this as
surgically as possible and disabled it only on targets I know to be
affected, as the code is still useful, even though it can only work on
best-effort basis.
llvm-svn: 303076
Templates can end in parameter packs, like this
template <class T...> struct MyStruct
{ /*...*/ };
LLDB does not currently support these parameter packs;
it does not emit them into the template argument list
at all. This causes problems when you specialize, e.g.:
template <> struct MyStruct<int>
{ /*...*/ };
template <> struct MyStruct<int, int> : MyStruct<int>
{ /*...*/ };
LLDB generates two template specializations, each with
no template arguments, and then when they are imported
by the ASTImporter into a parser's AST context we get a
single specialization that inherits from itself,
causing Clang's record layout mechanism to smash its
stack.
This patch fixes the problem for classes and adds
tests. The tests for functions fail because Clang's
ASTImporter can't import them at the moment, so I've
xfailed that test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33025
llvm-svn: 302833
Summary:
'arch' is a valid qHostInfo key, but the unit
test for qHostInfo did not include it in the set of possible keys.
Reviewers: tfiala, labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32711
llvm-svn: 302260
Summary:
I have found a way to segfault lldb in 7 keystrokes! Steps to reproduce:
1) Launch lldb
2) Type `print` and hit enter. lldb will now prompt you to type a list of
expressions, followed by an empty line.
3) Hit enter, indicating the end of your input.
4) Segfault!
After some investigation, I've found the issue in Host/common/Editline.cpp.
Editline::MoveCursor() relies on m_input_lines not being empty when the `to`
argument is CursorPosition::BlockEnd. This scenario, as far as I can tell,
occurs in one specific instance: In Editline::EndOrAddLineCommand() when the
list of lines being processed contains exactly one string (""). Meeting this
condition is fairly simple, I have posted steps to reproduce above.
Reviewers: krytarowski, zturner, labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: scott.smith, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32421
Patch by Alex Langford.
llvm-svn: 302225
Summary:
Arm64 Procedure Call Standard specifies than only vectors up to 16 bytes
are stored in v0 (which makes sense, as that's the size of the
register). 32-byte vector types are passed as regular structs via x8
pointer. Treat them as such.
This fixes TestReturnValue for arm64-clang. I also split the test case
into two so I can avoid the if(gcc) line, and annotate each test
instead. (It seems the vector type tests fail with gcc only when
targetting x86 arches).
Reviewers: tberghammer, eugene
Subscribers: aemerson, omjavaid, rengolin, srhines, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32813
llvm-svn: 302220
Summary:
The existing cpp-level checks using PR_MPX_ENABLE_MANAGEMENT aren't sufficient,
as this isn't defined for linux kernel versions below 3.19.
Reviewers: valentinagiusti, zturner, labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32719
llvm-svn: 302027
gnuwin32 rm does not like wildcards that match nothing even if we
specify -f (probably because the wildcard expansion happens in-process
there). We could use make $(wildcard) here, but it seems safer to
explicitly list the files here, just like the normal Makefile.rules
does.
llvm-svn: 302013
Loading a shared library can require a large amount of work; rather than do that serially for each library,
this patch will allow parallelization of the symbols and debug info name indexes.
From scott.smith@purestorage.comhttps://reviews.llvm.org/D32598
llvm-svn: 301609
Many times a user wants to access a type when there's a variable of
the same name, or a variable when there's a type of the same name.
Depending on the precise context, currently the expression parser
can fail to resolve one or the other.
This is because ClangExpressionDeclMap has logic to limit the
amount of information it searches, and that logic sometimes cuts
down the search prematurely. This patch removes some of those early
exits.
In that sense, this patch trades performance (early exit is faster)
for correctness.
I've also included two new test cases showing examples of this
behavior – as well as modifying an existing test case that gets it
wrong.
llvm-svn: 301273
LLDB uses clang::DeclContexts for lookups, and variables get put into
the DeclContext for their abstract origin. (The abstract origin is a
DWARF pointer that indicates the unique definition of inlined code.)
When the expression parser is looking for variables, it locates the
DeclContext for the current context. This needs to be done carefully,
though, e.g.:
__attribute__ ((always_inline)) void f(int a) {
{
int b = a * 2;
}
}
void g() {
f(3);
}
Here, if we're stopped in the inlined copy of f, we have to find the
DeclContext corresponding to the definition of f – its abstract
origin. Clang doesn't allow multiple functions with the same name and
arguments to exist. It also means that any variables we see must be
placed in the appropriate DeclContext.
[Bug 1]: When stopped in an inline block, the function
GetDeclContextDIEContainingDIE for that block doesn't properly
construct a DeclContext for the abstract origin for inlined
subroutines. That means we get duplicated function DeclContexts, but
function arguments only get put in the abstract origin's DeclContext,
and as a result when we try to look for them in nested contexts they
aren't found.
[Bug 2]: When stopped in an inline block, the DWARF (for space
reasons) doesn't explicitly point to the abstract origin for that
block. This means that the function GetClangDeclContextForDIE returns
a different DeclContext for each place the block is inlined. However,
any variables defined in the block have abstract origins, so they
will only get placed in the DeclContext for their abstract origin.
In this fix, I've introduced a test covering both of these issues,
and fixed them.
Bug 1 could be resolved simply by making sure we look up the abstract
origin for inlined functions when looking up their DeclContexts on
behalf of nested blocks.
For Bug 2, I've implemented an algorithm that makes the DeclContext
for a block be the containing DeclContext for the closest entity we
would find during lookup that has an abstract origin pointer. That
means that in the following situation:
{ // block 1
int a;
{ // block 2
int b;
}
}
if we looked up the DeclContext for block 2, we'd find the block
containing the abstract origin of b, and lookup would proceed
correctly because we'd see b and a. However, in the situation
{ // block 1
int a;
{ // block 2
}
}
since there isn't anything to look up in block 2, we can't determine
its abstract origin (and there is no such pointer in the DWARF for
blocks). However, we can walk up the parent chain and find a, and its
abstract origin lives in the abstract origin of block 1. So we simply
say that the DeclContext for block 2 is the same as the DeclContext
for block 1, which contains a. Lookups will return the same results.
Thanks to Jim Ingham for review and suggestions.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32375
llvm-svn: 301263
Summary:
MergeFrom was updating the architecture if the target triple did not
have it set. However, it was leaving the core field as invalid. This
resulted in assertion failures in core file tests as a missing core
meant we were unable to compute the address byte size properly.
Add a unit test for the new behaviour.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32221
llvm-svn: 300836
The test fails because an older clang did not emit the required debug
info (I am not sure when this got added, but clang-3.7 certainly did not
work yet). The actual platform has nothing to do with this.
llvm-svn: 300834
I thought my previous commit got the last ones but somehow I missed
these. This also resurrects TestDataFormatterLibcxxSet, which got
commented out in r263859 as a part of some seemingly unrelated change.
llvm-svn: 300833
Clang rejects __attribute__((regparm)) when targetting arm. The default
calling convention passes arguments in registers anyway, so we can just
remove them in this case.
llvm-svn: 300670
r285226 dropped the code that did these checks. I am pretty
sure that was inadvertent, so I added that back in and added
a test for it.
<rdar://problem/31661252>
llvm-svn: 300564
Summary:
The iteration list through the available data formatters was undefined,
which meant that the vector<bool> formatter kicked in only in cases
where it happened to be queried before the general vector formatter. To
fix this, I merge the two data formatter entries into one, and select
which implementation to use in the factory function.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, tberghammer, EricWF
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31880
llvm-svn: 300047
gcc emits DW_LANG_C89 even if we specify -std=c99 during compilation.
Since this isn't an lldb bug, but just the way the compiler happens to
be implemented, I teach the test to expect this situation correctly.
llvm-svn: 300046
I have put them all in their own category, and made that category disabled by default.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31718
llvm-svn: 299587
look showed that the target's arch has no core / byte order and so when
AuxVector::AuxVector calls into a dataextractor and sets the byte size to 0,
it asserts. e.g.
m_arch = {
m_triple = (Data = "x86_64--linux", Arch = x86_64, SubArch = NoSubArch, Vendor = UnknownVendor, OS = Linux, Environment = UnknownEnvironment, ObjectFormat = ELF)
m_core = kCore_invalid
m_byte_order = eByteOrderInvalid
m_flags = 0x00000000
m_distribution_id = <no value available>
}
<rdar://problem/31380097>
llvm-svn: 299408
Summary:
After this change a sythetic child provider can generate a special child
named "$$dereference$$" what if present is used when "operator*" or
"operator->" used on a ValueObject. The goal of the change is to make
expressions like "up->foo" work inside the "frame variable" command.
Reviewers: labath, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31368
llvm-svn: 299251
Summary:
Displaying the object pointed by the unique_ptr can cause an infinite
recursion when we have a pointer loop so this change stops that
behavior. Additionally it makes the unique_ptr act more like a class
containing a pointer (what is the underlying truth) instead of some
"magic" class.
Reviewers: labath, jingham
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31366
llvm-svn: 299249
Summary:
This aims to replace the different decorators we've had on each libc++
test with a single solution. Each libc++ will be assigned to the
"libc++" category and a single central piece of code will decide whether
we are actually able to run libc++ test in the given configuration by
enabling or disabling the category (while giving the user the
opportunity to override this).
I started this effort because I wanted to get libc++ tests running on
android, and none of the existing decorators worked for this use case:
- skipIfGcc - incorrect, we can build libc++ executables on android
with gcc (in fact, after this, we can now do it on linux as well)
- lldbutil.skip_if_library_missing - this checks whether libc++.so is
loaded in the proces, which fails in case of a statically linked
libc++ (this makes copying executables to the remote target easier to
manage).
To make this work I needed to split out the pseudo_barrier code from the
force-included file, as libc++'s atomic does not play well with gcc on
linux, and this made every test fail, even though we need the code only
in the threading tests.
So far, I am only annotating one of the tests with this category. If
this does not break anything, I'll proceed to update the rest.
Reviewers: jingham, zturner, EricWF
Subscribers: srhines, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30984
llvm-svn: 299028
This was added to workaround a limitation in LLVM's implementation
of getting the current user's home directory, since it would
only look at the value of $HOME, but we did not want to rely
on that being set so we would also look in the password database.
Adding the ability to look in the password database to LLVM was
a straightforward patch that was submitted in r298513, so since
that is done this test is no longer needed.
llvm-svn: 298519
This fixes a bug introduced by r291559. The Module's FindType was
passing the original name not the basename in the case where it didn't
find any separators. I also added a testcase for this.
<rdar://problem/31159173>
llvm-svn: 298331
Only do this when we are debugging an executable, since we
don't have a good way to trace from an ObjectFile back to its
containing executable. Detecting pre-run libs before running
is "best effort" in lldb, but this one is pretty easy.
llvm-svn: 298290
r298203 make SBPlatform::MakeDirectory less recursive, which breaks the
test suite creation of test directory hierarchy creation on the remote
target. Since the function was never fully recursive, and the name does
not imply recursiveness, I fix the problem by modifying the test runner
to do the recursion manually.
I also make the runner complain more loudly when it fails to create the
directory -- previously it just printed the error to stdout and caused
most of the tests to hang, which is not very helpful in diagnosing the
problem.
llvm-svn: 298261
dotest.py script doesn't validate executables passed on the command line
before spawning dozens of subprocesses, all of which fail silently,
leaving an empty results file.
We should validate the lldb and compiler executables on
configuration, aborting when given invalid paths, to prevent numerous,
cryptic, and spurious failures.
<rdar://problem/31117272>
llvm-svn: 298111
Summary:
These classes existed only because of the GetName() static function,
which can be moved to a more natural place anyway. I move the linux
version to NativeProcessLinux (and get rid of ProcFileReader), the
freebsd version to ProcessFreeBSD (and fix a bug where it was using the
current process ID, instead of the inferior pid), and remove the NetBSD
version (which was probably incorrect anyway, as it assumes the current
process instead of the inferior.
I also add an llgs test to that verifies thread names are read
correctly.
Reviewers: zturner, krytarowski, emaste
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30981
llvm-svn: 298058
It seems that on darwin we are not able to resolve breakpoints in the
test shared library until the process has started. That seems
unfortunate, but it is not the purpose of this test, so work around that
by starting the process before doing the rest of our checks.
llvm-svn: 297830
Summary:
This fixes the case where a user tries to set a breakpoint on a source
line outside of any function (e.g. because that code is #ifdefed out, or
the compiler did not emit code for the function, etc.) and we would
silently move the breakpoint to the next function.
Now we check whether the line range of the resolved symbol context
function matches the original line number. We reject any breakpoint
locations that appear to move the breakpoint into a new function. This
filtering only happens if we have full debug info available (e.g. in
case of -gline-tables-only compilation, we still set the breakpoint on
the nearest source line).
Reviewers: jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30817
llvm-svn: 297817
Summary:
This has been broken at least since the new test result framework was
added, which was over a year ago. It looks like nobody has missed it
since.
Removing this makes the gmodules handling code saner, as it already did
not know how to handle the multiple-compilers case.
My motivation for this is libc++ data formatters support on android -- I
am trying make a central way of determining whether libc++ tests can be
run, and without this, I would have to resort to similar hacks as the
gmodules code.
Reviewers: jingham, zturner
Subscribers: danalbert, tfiala, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30779
llvm-svn: 297811
This patch adds support to the test suite for overriding the path to debugserver, and uses the override to point to the build tree's debugserver on Darwin.
llvm-svn: 297776
Summary:
This adds support for building libc++ tests when targetting android. The
tests are still not passing due to several other problems, but this way
we can at least build them.
Reviewers: eugene, EricWF, danalbert
Subscribers: srhines, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30737
llvm-svn: 297616
SectionLoadList exposed by this test. Greg tried to chase it down
& got pretty far but the isn't correct so we'll disable this test
for now until I can figure that out.
<rdar://problem/30899227>
llvm-svn: 297440
The toolchain directory for arm android targets was computed
incorrectly. The architecture part should be arm, and the environment
part androideabi. This fixes that.
llvm-svn: 297279
it fails, but it works on the local workstations. I'll
need to figure out what the difference is between these.
<rdar://problem/30915340>
llvm-svn: 297259
Currently on remote platforms the lldb-mi tests fail, which means they time out.
Given how many of the lldb-mi tests there are, this means a long wait.
llvm-svn: 296951
Prior to MSVC 2015 we had to manually include this header any
time we were going to include <thread> or <future> due to a
bug in MSVC's STL implementation. This has been fixed in MSVC
for some time now, and we require VS 2015 minimum, so we can
remove this across all subprojects.
llvm-svn: 296906
$(realpath), which I guess is a make builtin, gives strange results on
Windows. $(shell realpath) invokes the gnuwin external binary, which
works correctly.
llvm-svn: 296876
Make sure we don't generate extremely long file names for test trace log
file, as this can cause path-too-long errors. As the compilers in the
android ndk are deeply nested, it's very easy to trigger these.
I chose to output at most 4 path components -- this should keep the full
path for common cases like /usr/bin/gcc with room to spare, and should
be enough to uniquely identify the compiler for more deeply nested
cases.
llvm-svn: 296870
Summary:
This teaches the test makefiles about the Android NDK, so we are able to
run the tests without first going through the make_standalone_toolchain
script. The motivation for this is the ability to run both libc++ and
libstdc++ tests together, which previously was not possible because
make_standalone_toolchain bakes in the STL to use during toolchain
creation time. The support for this is not present yet -- this change
only make sure we don't regress for existing funcionality (gcc w/
libstdc++). Clang and libc++ support will be added later.
I've checked that the mips android targets compile after this change,
but I have no way of checking whether this breaks anything. If you are
reading this and it broke you, let me know.
Reviewers: tberghammer, danalbert
Subscribers: srhines, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30410
llvm-svn: 296869
this test was using the VPATH hack to avoid having a copy of the
inferior source code. This makes the test fail if in happens to run
concurrently with a test in the parent folder. Fix that by moving it up
to the parent.
llvm-svn: 296741
Summary:
Native Thread ID is retrieved with _lwp_self() on NetBSD.
The returned value is of type int32_t, but for consistency with other Operating Systems cast it to uint64_t.
Sponsored by <The NetBSD Foundation>
Reviewers: joerg, labath, clayborg, emaste
Reviewed By: labath, clayborg
Subscribers: #lldb
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30374
llvm-svn: 296360
Summary:
There is nothing we can do with the breakpoint once the associated
target becomes deleted. This will make sure we don't hold on to more
resources than we need in this case. In particular, this fixes the case
TestStepOverBreakpoint on windows, where a lingering SBBreakpoint object
causes us to nor unmap the executable file from memory.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30249
llvm-svn: 296328
Summary: QPassSignals package allows lldb client to tell lldb-server to ignore certain types of signals and re-inject them back to inferior without stopping execution.
Reviewers: jmajors, labath
Subscribers: danalbert, srhines, emaste, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30286
Author: Eugene Zemtsov <ezemtsov@google.com>
llvm-svn: 296101
acquired only after checking if the ivar shared pointer was already
filled in. But when I assign an UnwindPlan object to the shared
pointer, I assign an empty object and then fill it in. That leaves
a window where another thread could get the shared pointer to the
empty (but quickly being-filled-in) object and lead to a crash.
Also two changes from Greg for correctness on the TestMultipleDebuggers
test case.
<rdar://problem/30564102>
llvm-svn: 296084
Summary:
This also removes magic rename code, which caused the channel to be
called "linux" when built on a linux machine, and "freebsd" when built
on a freebsd one, which seems unnecessary - registering a new channel is
sufficiently simple now that if we wish to log something extremely
os-specific, we can just create a new channel. None of the current
categories seem very specific to one OS or another.
Reviewers: emaste, krytarowski
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30250
llvm-svn: 295954
In the case we are stepping over the thread creation instruction, we
will end up calling Thread::SingleStep back-to-back twice (because of
the intermediate PTRACE_EVENT_CLONE stop). This will cause the cpu mask
to be set inappropriately (because the old SingleStepCheck object will
be destroyed after we create the new one), and the single-step will
fail.
Before the refactor the code was still incorrect in this case, but in a
different way (the thread was left with the incorrect mask after the
stepping was complete), so this was not easy to spot.
This fixes TestCreateDuringInstructionStep on the affected devices.
llvm-svn: 295440
Summary:
GCC emits also symbols for the __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ virtual variable,
which we accidentaly pick up when looking for functions for with
"unique_function_name" in the name. This makes the target.FindFunctions
call fail, as that symbol is not a function.
I also strenghten the test a bit to make sure we actually find all the
functions we are interested in. I've put a check that we find at least 6
functions, but maybe this should be *exactly* 6 ?
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29932
llvm-svn: 295170
This test is flaky on the windows->android bot. Change assertTrue to
assertEqual in the hope better error messages will direct us to the
problem.
llvm-svn: 294737
Summary:
The server was no longer sending the thread PCs the way the client
expected them.
I changed the server to send them back as a threadstop info field,
similar to the Apple version of the server.
I also changed the client to look for them there, before querying the
server.
I added a test to ensure the server doesn't stop sending them.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28880
Author: Jason Majors
llvm-svn: 292611
We are going to turn off buffer overflow introduced by gcc by turning off
FORTIFY_SOURCE.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28666
llvm-svn: 291949
Summary:
Some of the mi commands implemented in lldb-mi are incomplete/not confirming to the spec.
- `gdb-show` and `gdb-set` doesn't support getting/setting `disassembly-flavor`
- `environment-cd` should also change the working directory for inferior
- debugger CLI output should be printed as console-stream-output record, rather than being dumped directly
to stdout
- `target-select` should provide inner error message in mi response
Related bug report:
- https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28026
- https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28718
- https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30265
Reviewers: ki.stfu, abidh
Subscribers: abidh, ki.stfu, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24711
llvm-svn: 291104
r290874 enabled the s390x test, which caused the rest of the tests to start
misbehaving. This is because this test switches the selected platform and the
change persists.
This fixes it by explicitly resetting the platform in a similar way to the gcore
tests do. Potentially we should consider re-setting the platform globally
between each test run to better protect tests from each other.
llvm-svn: 290890
Summary:
This patch changes and simplifies the way notes are read from Linux Elf cores.
The current implementation copies the bytes from the notes directly over the lldb structure for 64 bit cores and reads field by field for 32 bit cores. Reading the bytes directly only works if the endianess of the core dump and the platform that lldb are running on matches. The case statements for s390x and x86_64 would would only work on big endian systems and little endian systems respectively. That meant that x86_64 generally worked but s390x didn't unless you were on s390x or another big endian platform.
This patch just reads field by field on all platform and updates the field by field version to allow for those fields which are word size instead of fixed size. It should also slightly simplify adding support for a new Linux platform.
This patch also re-enables the s390x test case in TestLinuxCore.py on all non-s390x platforms as it now passes.
Reviewers: uweigand, clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27571
llvm-svn: 290874
We're seeing some very occasional failures in these tests where the
mini-driver dies with a SIGPIPE. We don't use SIGPIPE for anything, and
the main lldb driver program already ignores SIGPIPE, so ignoring it in
the mini-driver is a good way to remove these spurious failures.
<rdar://problem/29740488>
llvm-svn: 290216
Fixed by additional completed plans detection, and applying them on breakpoint condition fail.
Thread::GetStopInfo reworked. New test added.
Review https://reviews.llvm.org/D26497
Many thanks to Jim
llvm-svn: 290168
We don't parse ObjC v1 types from the runtime metadata like we do for ObjC v2, but doing so by creating empty types was ruining the i386 v1 debugging experience.
<rdar://problem/24093343>
llvm-svn: 289233
This test links against liblldb, so it can only run when the target arch is the
same arch as liblldb. We already have a decorator for that, so apply it.
While I'm in there, also mark the test as debug-info independent.
llvm-svn: 289199
I found the race condition in:
ScriptInterpreter *CommandInterpreter::GetScriptInterpreter(bool can_create);
More than one "ScriptInterpreter *" was being returned due to the race which caused any clients with the first one to now be pointing to freed memory and we would quickly crash.
Added a test to catch this so we don't regress.
<rdar://problem/28356584>
llvm-svn: 289169
to not be set by Process::WillPublicStop() so the driver won't get
access to them. The fix is straightforward, moving the call to
WillPublicStop above the early return for the interrupt case. (the
interrupt case does an early return because the rest of the function
is concerned with running stop hooks etc and those are not applicable
when we've interrupted the process).
Also added a test case for it. The test case is a little complicated
because I needed to drive lldb asynchronously to give the program
a chance to get up and running before I interrupt it. Running to
a breakpoint was not sufficient to catch this bug.
<rdar://problem/22693778>
llvm-svn: 289026
We have a longstanding issue where the expression parser does not handle wide CFStrings (e.g., @"凸凹") correctly, producing the useless error message
Internal error [IRForTarget]: An Objective-C constant string's string initializer is not an array
error: warning: expression result unused
error: The expression could not be prepared to run in the target
This is just a side effect of the fact that we don't handle wide string constants when converting these to CFStringCreateWithBytes. That function takes the string's encoding as an argument, so I made it work and added a testcase.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D27291
<rdar://problem/13190557>
llvm-svn: 288386