Commit Graph

168 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Enrico Granata
e743c78299 <rdar://problem/13209140>
“plugin load” tries to be more helpful when it fails to load a plugin

llvm-svn: 180218
2013-04-24 21:29:08 +00:00
Greg Clayton
85d0c57bb3 <rdar://problem/13449987>
Show thread name and dispatch queue by default in the thread display.

llvm-svn: 178790
2013-04-04 20:40:35 +00:00
Greg Clayton
5160ce5c72 <rdar://problem/13521159>
LLDB is crashing when logging is enabled from lldb-perf-clang. This has to do with the global destructor chain as the process and its threads are being torn down.

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

llvm-svn: 178191
2013-03-27 23:08:40 +00:00
Enrico Granata
9fb5ab558b Our commands that end up displaying a ValueObject as part of their workflow use OptionGroupValueObjectDisplay as their currency for deciding the final representation
ValueObjects themselves use DumpValueObjectOptions as the currency for the same purpose

The code to convert between these two units was replicated (to varying degrees of correctness) in several spots in the code
This checkin provides one and only one (and hopefully correct :-) entry point for this conversion

llvm-svn: 178044
2013-03-26 18:04:53 +00:00
Greg Clayton
855958caef <rdar://problem/13502196>
Functions in "(anonymous namespace)" was causing LLDB to crash when trying to complete a type and it would also cause functions arguments to appear in wrong place in frame display when showing function arguments.

llvm-svn: 177965
2013-03-26 01:45:43 +00:00
Greg Clayton
5088c48686 <rdar://problem/13498879>
C String summary is emitting "<invalid usage of pointer value as object>" for bad pointers. Now it doesn't emit anything.

llvm-svn: 177913
2013-03-25 21:06:13 +00:00
Greg Clayton
9585fbfc67 <rdar://problem/13443931>
Fixed a crasher in the SourceManager where it wasn't checking the m_target member variable for NULL.

In doing this fix, I hardened this class to have weak pointers to the debugger and target in case they do go away. I also changed SBSourceManager to hold onto weak pointers to the debugger and target so they don't keep objects alive by holding a strong reference to them.

llvm-svn: 177365
2013-03-19 00:20:55 +00:00
Jim Ingham
1fd0705904 Call Process::Finalize directly in Debugger::Destroy, rather than having it done
in the Process destructor.  Doing it there can be too late depending on what the internal state
and ProcessGDBRemote Async threads are doing.

<rdar://problem/13297536>

llvm-svn: 176203
2013-02-27 19:13:05 +00:00
Enrico Granata
599171addf Moving from std::auto_ptr<char> to std::string for simple string memory management.
It is better practice and, also, it is not clear whether std::auto_ptr<> is smart enough to know about delete[] vs. delete

llvm-svn: 174236
2013-02-01 23:59:44 +00:00
Enrico Granata
5548cb50b2 <rdar://problem/12978143>
Data formatters now cache themselves.
This commit provides a new formatter cache mechanism. Upon resolving a formatter (summary or synthetic), LLDB remembers the resolution for later faster retrieval.
Also moved the data formatters subsystem from the core to its own group and folder for easier management, and done some code reorganization.
The ObjC runtime v1 now returns a class name if asked for the dynamic type of an object. This is required for formatters caching to work with the v1 runtime.
Lastly, this commit disposes of the old hack where ValueObjects had to remember whether they were queried for formatters with their static or dynamic type.
Now the ValueObjectDynamicValue class works well enough that we can use its dynamic value setting for the same purpose.

llvm-svn: 173728
2013-01-28 23:47:25 +00:00
Greg Clayton
c7bece56fa <rdar://problem/13069948>
Major fixed to allow reading files that are over 4GB. The main problems were that the DataExtractor was using 32 bit offsets as a data cursor, and since we mmap all of our object files we could run into cases where if we had a very large core file that was over 4GB, we were running into the 4GB boundary.

So I defined a new "lldb::offset_t" which should be used for all file offsets.

After making this change, I enabled warnings for data loss and for enexpected implicit conversions temporarily and found a ton of things that I fixed.

Any functions that take an index internally, should use "size_t" for any indexes and also should return "size_t" for any sizes of collections.

llvm-svn: 173463
2013-01-25 18:06:21 +00:00
Greg Clayton
c1b2ccfd34 <rdar://problem/12953853>
Setting breakpoints using "breakpoint set --selector <SEL>" previously didn't when there was no dSYM file.

Also fixed issues in the test suite that arose after fixing the bug.

Also fixed the log channels to properly ref count the log streams using weak pointers to the streams. This fixes a test suite problem that would happen when you specified a full path to the compiler with the "--compiler" option.

llvm-svn: 171816
2013-01-08 00:01:36 +00:00
Greg Clayton
3b188b1752 <rdar://problem/11844604>
When displaying function.name-with-args format will now print "varname=<unavailable>" instead of omitting argument names and values when there is an error reading the value.

llvm-svn: 169781
2012-12-10 22:26:34 +00:00
Greg Clayton
4ef877f5e9 <rdar://problem/12560257>
Fixed zero sized arrays to work correctly. This will only happen once we get a clang that emits correct debug info for zero sized arrays. For now I have marked the TestStructTypes.py as an expected failure.

llvm-svn: 169465
2012-12-06 02:33:54 +00:00
Daniel Malea
93a64300f8 Fix Linux build warnings due to redefinition of macros:
- add new header lldb-python.h to be included before other system headers
- short term fix (eventually python dependencies must be cleaned up)

Patch by Matt Kopec!

llvm-svn: 169341
2012-12-05 00:20:57 +00:00
Jim Ingham
c5917d9a38 Save and restore terminal state when lldb is suspended with SIGTSTP and resumed with SIGCONT.
Readline & gdb have a bunch of code to handle older UNIX'es with other job control mechanisms.
I didn't try to replicate that.

llvm-svn: 169032
2012-11-30 20:23:19 +00:00
Daniel Malea
d01b2953fa Resolve printf formatting warnings on Linux:
- use macros from inttypes.h for format strings instead of OS-specific types

Patch from Matt Kopec!

llvm-svn: 168945
2012-11-29 21:49:15 +00:00
Enrico Granata
b588726ec9 <rdar://problem/11449953> Change Debugger::SetOutputFileHandle() so that it does not automatically initialize the script interpreter in order to transfer its output file handle to it
This should delay initialization of Python until strictly necessary and speed-up debugger startup
Also, convert formatters for SEL and BOOL ObjC data-types from Python to C++, in order to reap more performance benefits from the above changes

llvm-svn: 166967
2012-10-29 21:18:03 +00:00
Greg Clayton
e8cd0c9859 Added the infrastructure necessary for plug-ins to be able to add their own settings instead of having settings added to existing ones. In particular "target.disable-kext-loading" was added to "target" where it should actually be specific to the the dynamic loader plugin. Now the plug-in manager has the ability to create settings at the root level starting with "plugin". Each plug-in type can add new sub dictionaries, and then each plug-in can register a setting dictionary under its own short name. For example the DynamicLoaderDarwinKernel plug-in now registers a setting dictionary at:
plugin
    dynamic-loader
        macosx-kernel
            (bool) disable-kext-loading
            
To settings can be set using:

(lldb) settings set plugin.dynamic-loader.macosx-kernel.disable-kext-loading true

I currently only hooked up the DynamicLoader plug-ins, but the code is very easy to duplicate when and if we need settings for other plug-ins.

llvm-svn: 166294
2012-10-19 18:02:49 +00:00
Enrico Granata
d228483d8c Improvements to the data formatters logging - plus, new log messages when our dynamic type changes
llvm-svn: 166133
2012-10-17 22:23:56 +00:00
Jim Ingham
5d88a068ee Patch from Matt Kopec <matt.kopec@intel.com> to fix the problem that if two breakpoints were set on consecutive addresses, the continue from the
first breakpoint would skip the second.

llvm-svn: 166000
2012-10-16 00:09:33 +00:00
Enrico Granata
21dfcd9d41 Implementing plugins that provide commands.
This checkin adds the capability for LLDB to load plugins from external dylibs that can provide new commands
It exports an SBCommand class from the public API layer, and a new SBCommandPluginInterface

There is a minimal load-only plugin manager built into the debugger, which can be accessed via Debugger::LoadPlugin.

Plugins are loaded from two locations at debugger startup (LLDB.framework/Resources/PlugIns and ~/Library/Application Support/LLDB/PlugIns) and more can be (re)loaded via the "plugin load" command

For an example of how to make a plugin, refer to the fooplugin.cpp file in examples/plugins/commands

Caveats:
	Currently, the new API objects and features are not exposed via Python.
	The new commands can only be "parsed" (i.e. not raw) and get their command line via a char** parameter (we do not expose our internal Args object)
	There is no unloading feature, which can potentially lead to leaks if you overwrite the commands by reloading the same or different plugins
	There is no API exposed for option parsing, which means you may need to use getopt or roll-your-own

llvm-svn: 164865
2012-09-28 23:57:51 +00:00
Greg Clayton
a12993c930 Fixed an error with a static enum definition where it wasn't NULL terminate and could crash.
llvm-svn: 163851
2012-09-13 23:03:20 +00:00
Greg Clayton
4c05410f8f Made it so changes to the prompt via "settings set prompt" get noticed by the command line.
Added the ability for OptionValueString objects to take flags. The only flag is currently for parsing escape sequences. Not the prompt string can have escape characters translate which will allow colors in the prompt.

Added functions to Args that will parse the escape sequences in a string, and also re-encode the escape sequences for display. This was looted from other parts of LLDB (the Debugger::FormatString() function).

llvm-svn: 163043
2012-09-01 00:38:36 +00:00
Greg Clayton
1f7460716b <rdar://problem/11757916>
Make breakpoint setting by file and line much more efficient by only looking for inlined breakpoint locations if we are setting a breakpoint in anything but a source implementation file. Implementing this complex for a many reasons. Turns out that parsing compile units lazily had some issues with respect to how we need to do things with DWARF in .o files. So the fixes in the checkin for this makes these changes:
- Add a new setting called "target.inline-breakpoint-strategy" which can be set to "never", "always", or "headers". "never" will never try and set any inlined breakpoints (fastest). "always" always looks for inlined breakpoint locations (slowest, but most accurate). "headers", which is the default setting, will only look for inlined breakpoint locations if the breakpoint is set in what are consudered to be header files, which is realy defined as "not in an implementation source file". 
- modify the breakpoint setting by file and line to check the current "target.inline-breakpoint-strategy" setting and act accordingly
- Modify compile units to be able to get their language and other info lazily. This allows us to create compile units from the debug map and not have to fill all of the details in, and then lazily discover this information as we go on debuggging. This is needed to avoid parsing all .o files when setting breakpoints in implementation only files (no inlines). Otherwise we would need to parse the .o file, the object file (mach-o in our case) and the symbol file (DWARF in the object file) just to see what the compile unit was.
- modify the "SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap" to subclass lldb_private::Module so that the virtual "GetObjectFile()" and "GetSymbolVendor()" functions can be intercepted when the .o file contenst are later lazilly needed. Prior to this fix, when we first instantiated the "SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap" class, we would also make modules, object files and symbol files for every .o file in the debug map because we needed to fix up the sections in the .o files with information that is in the executable debug map. Now we lazily do this in the DebugMapModule::GetObjectFile()

Cleaned up header includes a bit as well.

llvm-svn: 162860
2012-08-29 21:13:06 +00:00
Greg Clayton
754a9369db <rdar://problem/12022079>
Added a new "interpreter" properties to encapsulate any properties for the command interpreter. Right now this contains only "expand-regex-aliases", so you can now enable (disabled by default) the echoing of the command that a regular expression alias expands to:

(lldb) b main
Breakpoint created: 1: name = 'main', locations = 1

Note that the expanded regular expression command wasn't shown by default. You can enable it if you want to:

(lldb) settings set interpreter.expand-regex-aliases true
(lldb) b main
breakpoint set --name 'main'
Breakpoint created: 1: name = 'main', locations = 1

Also enabled auto completion for enumeration option values (OptionValueEnumeration) and for boolean option values (OptionValueBoolean).

Fixed auto completion for settings names when nothing has been type (it should show all settings).

llvm-svn: 162418
2012-08-23 00:22:02 +00:00
Greg Clayton
6920b52be6 Remove further outdated "settings" code and also implement a few missing things.
llvm-svn: 162376
2012-08-22 18:39:03 +00:00
Greg Clayton
67cc06366c Reimplemented the code that backed the "settings" in lldb. There were many issues with the previous implementation:
- no setting auto completion
- very manual and error prone way of getting/setting variables
- tons of code duplication
- useless instance names for processes, threads

Now settings can easily be defined like option values. The new settings makes use of the "OptionValue" classes so we can re-use the option value code that we use to set settings in command options. No more instances, just "does the right thing".

llvm-svn: 162366
2012-08-22 17:17:09 +00:00
Jim Ingham
462227b08b Turn on function args by default in thread & frame formats.
<rdar://problem/11703715>

llvm-svn: 161611
2012-08-09 20:29:34 +00:00
Sean Callanan
bcf897fa89 LLDB no longer prints <no result> by default if
the expression returns nothing.  There is now a
setting, "notify-void."  When the user enables
that setting, lldb prints (void) if an expression's
result is void.  Otherwise, lldb is silent.

<rdar://problem/11225150>

llvm-svn: 161600
2012-08-09 18:18:47 +00:00
Sean Callanan
9a028519e8 Removed explicit NULL checks for shared pointers
and instead made us use implicit casts to bool.
This generated a warning in C++11.

<rdar://problem/11930775>

llvm-svn: 161559
2012-08-09 00:50:26 +00:00
Greg Clayton
23f59509a8 Ran the static analyzer on the codebase and found a few things.
llvm-svn: 160338
2012-07-17 03:23:13 +00:00
Greg Clayton
685c88c5a8 <rdar://problem/11870357>
Allow "frame variable" to find ivars without the need for "this->" or "self->".  

llvm-svn: 160211
2012-07-14 00:53:55 +00:00
Greg Clayton
53eb7ad2f7 <rdar://problem/11852100>
The "stop-line-count-after" and "stop-line-count-before" settings are broken. This fixes them.

llvm-svn: 160071
2012-07-11 20:33:48 +00:00
Greg Clayton
0d69a3a4b3 <rdar://problem/11246147>
Make sure our debugger STDIN read thread shuts down quickly when we are done with it. We had a case where the owner of the file handle was not closing it and caused spins.

llvm-svn: 156879
2012-05-16 00:11:54 +00:00
Enrico Granata
a777dc2abe <rdar://problem/11338654> Fixing a bug where having a summary for a bitfield without a format specified would in certain cases crash LLDB - This has also led to refactoring the by-type accessors for the data formatter subsystem. These now belong in our internal layer, and are just invoked by the public API stratum
llvm-svn: 156429
2012-05-08 21:49:57 +00:00
Jim Ingham
57190baa6c Don't call SBDebugger::SetInternalVariable in the sigwinch_handler, since that takes locks and potentially does allocations.
Just call SBDebugger::SetTerminalWidth on the driver's SBDebugger, which does the same job, but no locks.
Also add the value checking to SetTerminalWidth you get with SetInternalVariable(..., "term-width", ...).

rdar://problem/11310563

llvm-svn: 155665
2012-04-26 21:39:32 +00:00
Greg Clayton
c15f55e267 <rdar://problem/11148044>
Fixed a potential crasher that could happen after Debugger::Terminate() was called.

llvm-svn: 153774
2012-03-30 20:53:46 +00:00
Enrico Granata
c5bc412cf6 Synthetic values are now automatically enabled and active by default. SBValue is set up to always wrap a synthetic value when one is available.
A new setting enable-synthetic-value is provided on the target to disable this behavior.
There also is a new GetNonSyntheticValue() API call on SBValue to go back from synthetic to non-synthetic. There is no call to go from non-synthetic to synthetic.
The test suite has been changed accordingly.
Fallout from changes to type searching: an hack has to be played to make it possible to use maps that contain std::string due to the special name replacement operated by clang
Fixing a test case that was using libstdcpp instead of libc++ - caught as a consequence of said changes to type searching

llvm-svn: 153495
2012-03-27 02:35:13 +00:00
Enrico Granata
86cc982974 Massive enumeration name changes: a number of enums in ValueObject were not following the naming pattern
Changes to synthetic children:
 - the update(self): function can now (optionally) return a value - if it returns boolean value True, ValueObjectSyntheticFilter will not clear its caches across stop-points
   this should allow better performance for Python-based synthetic children when one can be sure that the child ValueObjects have not changed
 - making a difference between a synthetic VO and a VO with a synthetic value: now a ValueObjectSyntheticFilter will not return itself as its own synthetic value, but will (correctly)
   claim to itself be synthetic
 - cleared up the internal synthetic children architecture to make a more consistent use of pointers and references instead of shared pointers when possible
 - major cleanup of unnecessary #include, data and functions in ValueObjectSyntheticFilter itself
 - removed the SyntheticValueType enum and replaced it with a plain boolean (to which it was equivalent in the first place)
Some clean ups to the summary generation code
Centralized the code that clears out user-visible strings and data in ValueObject
More efficient summaries for libc++ containers

llvm-svn: 153061
2012-03-19 22:58:49 +00:00
Greg Clayton
e761213428 <rdar://problem/10997402>
This fix really needed to happen as a previous fix I had submitted for
calculating symbol sizes made many symbols appear to have zero size since
the function that was calculating the symbol size was calling another function
that would cause the calculation to happen again. This resulted in some symbols
having zero size when they shouldn't. This could then cause infinite stack
traces and many other side affects.

llvm-svn: 152244
2012-03-07 21:03:09 +00:00
Jim Ingham
4f02b22db5 Make Debugger::SetLoggingCallback public, and expose it through the SB API. Sometimes it is not
convenient to provide a log callback right when the debugger is created.

llvm-svn: 151209
2012-02-22 22:49:20 +00:00
Jim Ingham
228063cd21 Add a logging mode that takes a callback and flush'es to that callback.
Also add SB API's to set this callback, and to enable the log channels.

llvm-svn: 151018
2012-02-21 02:23:08 +00:00
Greg Clayton
cc4d0146b4 This checking is part one of trying to add some threading safety to our
internals. The first part of this is to use a new class:

lldb_private::ExecutionContextRef

This class holds onto weak pointers to the target, process, thread and frame
and it also contains the thread ID and frame Stack ID in case the thread and
frame objects go away and come back as new objects that represent the same
logical thread/frame. 

ExecutionContextRef objcets have accessors to access shared pointers for
the target, process, thread and frame which might return NULL if the backing
object is no longer available. This allows for references to persistent program
state without needing to hold a shared pointer to each object and potentially
keeping that object around for longer than it needs to be. 

You can also "Lock" and ExecutionContextRef (which contains weak pointers)
object into an ExecutionContext (which contains strong, or shared pointers)
with code like

ExecutionContext exe_ctx (my_obj->GetExectionContextRef().Lock());

llvm-svn: 150801
2012-02-17 07:49:44 +00:00
Jim Ingham
4bddaeb5ab Add a general mechanism to wait on the debugger for Broadcasters of a given class/event bit set.
Use this to allow the lldb Driver to emit notifications for breakpoint modifications.
<rdar://problem/10619974>

llvm-svn: 150665
2012-02-16 06:50:00 +00:00
Enrico Granata
061858ce61 <rdar://problem/10062621>
New public API for handling formatters: creating, deleting, modifying categories, and formatters, and managing type/formatter association.
This provides SB classes for each of the main object types involved in providing formatter support:
 SBTypeCategory
 SBTypeFilter
 SBTypeFormat
 SBTypeSummary
 SBTypeSynthetic
plus, an SBTypeNameSpecifier class that is used on the public API layer to abstract the notion that formatters can be applied to plain type-names as well as to regular expressions
For naming consistency, this patch also renames a lot of formatters-related classes.
Plus, the changes in how flags are handled that started with summaries is now extended to other classes as well. A new enum (lldb::eTypeOption) is meant to support this on the public side.
The patch also adds several new calls to the formatter infrastructure that are used to implement by-index accessing and several other design changes required to accommodate the new API layer.
An architectural change is introduced in that backing objects for formatters now become writable. On the public API layer, CoW is implemented to prevent unwanted propagation of changes.
Lastly, there are some modifications in how the "default" category is constructed and managed in relation to other categories.

llvm-svn: 150558
2012-02-15 02:34:21 +00:00
Greg Clayton
b9556acc9e SBFrame is now threadsafe using some extra tricks. One issue is that stack
frames might go away (the object itself, not the actual logical frame) when
we are single stepping due to the way we currently sometimes end up flushing
frames when stepping in/out/over. They later will come back to life 
represented by another object yet they have the same StackID. Now when you get
a lldb::SBFrame object, it will track the frame it is initialized with until 
the thread goes away or the StackID no longer exists in the stack for the 
thread it was created on. It uses a weak_ptr to both the frame and thread and
also stores the StackID. These three items allow us to determine when the
stack frame object has gone away (the weak_ptr will be NULL) and allows us to
find the correct frame again. In our test suite we had such cases where we
were just getting lucky when something like this happened:

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

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

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

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

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

llvm-svn: 149207
2012-01-29 20:56:30 +00:00
Greg Clayton
5b6889b1f6 Fixed an issue in the debugger format strings that include "${function.name-with-args}"
where we grabbed the variable list size from the wrong list (we needed it
from "args" and we were getting it from "variable_list_sp").

llvm-svn: 148425
2012-01-18 21:56:18 +00:00
Greg Clayton
32720b51e2 <rdar://problem/9731573>
Fixed two double "int close(int fd)" issues found by our file descriptor
interposing library on darwin:

The first is in SBDebugger::SetInputFileHandle (FILE *file, bool transfer_ownership)
where we would give our FILE * to a lldb_private::File object member variable and tell
it that it owned the file descriptor if "transfer_ownership" was true, and then we
would also give it to the communication plug-in that waits for stdin to come in and
tell it that it owned the FILE *. They would both try and close the file.

The seconds was when we use a file descriptor through ConnectionFileDescriptor 
where someone else is creating a connection with ConnectionFileDescriptor and a URL
like: "fd://123". We were always taking ownwership of the fd 123, when we shouldn't
be. There is a TODO in the comments that says we should allow URL options to be passed
to be able to specify this later (something like: "fd://123?transer_ownership=1"), but
we can get to this later.

llvm-svn: 148201
2012-01-14 20:47:38 +00:00