Commit Graph

625 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Pavel Labath
a1ab2b773b [lldb] More memory allocation test fixes
XFAIL nodefaultlib.cpp on darwin - the test does not pass there

XFAIL TestGdbRemoteMemoryAllocation on windows - memory is allocated
with incorrect permissions
2020-10-14 20:43:47 +02:00
Pavel Labath
36f22cd28d [lldb] Fix TestGdbRemoteMemoryAllocation on windows
It appears that memory allocation actually works on windows (but it was
not fully wired up before 2c4226f8).
2020-10-14 16:46:10 +02:00
Pavel Labath
2c4226f8ac [lldb-server][linux] Add ability to allocate memory
This patch adds support for the _M and _m gdb-remote packets, which
(de)allocate memory in the inferior. This works by "injecting" a
m(un)map syscall into the inferior. This consists of:
- finding an executable page of memory
- writing the syscall opcode to it
- setting up registers according to the os syscall convention
- single stepping over the syscall

The advantage of this approach over calling the mmap function is that
this works even in case the mmap function is buggy or unavailable. The
disadvantage is it is more platform-dependent, which is why this patch
only works on X86 (_32 and _64) right now. Adding support for other
linux architectures should be easy and consist of defining the
appropriate syscall constants. Adding support for other OSes depends on
the its ability to do a similar trick.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89124
2020-10-14 15:02:09 +02:00
Raphael Isemann
cb81e662a5 [lldb] Reject redefinitions of persistent variables
Currently one can redefine a persistent variable and LLDB will just silently
ignore the second definition:

```
(lldb) expr int $i = 1
(lldb) expr int $i = 2
(lldb) expr $i
(int) $i = 1
```

This patch makes this an error and rejects the expression with the second
definition.

A nice follow up would be to refactor LLDB's persistent variables to not just be
a pair of type and name, but also contain some way to obtain the original
declaration and source code that declared the variable. That way we could
actually make a full diagnostic as we would get from redefining a variable twice
in the same expression.

Reviewed By: labath, shafik, JDevlieghere

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89310
2020-10-14 10:24:35 +02:00
Raphael Isemann
02114e15da [lldb] Allow limiting the number of error diagnostics when parsing an expression
While debugging another bug I found out that we currently don't set any limit
for the number of diagnostics Clang emits. If a user does something that
generates a lot of errors (like including some long header file from within the
expression function), then we currently spam the LLDB output with potentially
thousands of Clang error diagnostics.

Clang sets a default limit of 20 errors, but given that LLDB is often used
interactively for small expressions I would say a limit of 5 is enough. The
limit is implemented as a setting, so if a user cares about seeing having a
million errors printed to their terminal then they can just increase the
settings value.

Reviewed By: shafik, mib

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88889
2020-10-13 17:12:43 +02:00
Raphael Isemann
ef733d9df4 [lldb] Add targets for running test suite against Watch/TV/iPhone simulators
This patch adds several build system targets that run the normal test suite but
against the Watch/TV/iPhone simulators.

Reviewed By: JDevlieghere

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89224
2020-10-13 17:07:46 +02:00
Jonas Devlieghere
360ab009e2 [lldb] Add instrumentation runtime category 2020-10-12 16:02:40 -07:00
Walter Erquinigo
26d861cbbd [trace] Scaffold "thread trace dump instructions"
Depends on D88841

As per the discussion in the RFC, we'll implement both

  thread trace dump [instructions | functions]

This is the first step in implementing the "instructions" dumping command.

It includes:

- A minimal ProcessTrace plugin for representing processes from a trace file. I noticed that it was a required step to mimic how core-based processes are initialized, e.g. ProcessElfCore and ProcessMinidump. I haven't had the need to create ThreadTrace yet, though. So far HistoryThread seems good enough.
- The command handling itself in CommandObjectThread, which outputs a placeholder text instead of the actual instructions. I'll do that part in the next diff.
- Tests

{F13132325}

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88769
2020-10-12 12:08:18 -07:00
Walter Erquinigo
ea1f49741e [intel pt] Refactor parsing
With the feedback I was getting in different diffs, I realized that splitting the parsing logic into two classes was not easy to deal with. I do see value in doing that, but I'd rather leave that as a refactor after most of the intel-pt logic is in place. Thus, I'm merging the common parser into the intel pt one, having thus only one that is fully aware of Intel PT during parsing and object creation.

Besides, based on the feedback in https://reviews.llvm.org/D88769, I'm creating a ThreadIntelPT class that will be able to orchestrate decoding of its own trace and can handle the stop events correctly.

This leaves the TraceIntelPT class as an initialization class that glues together different components. Right now it can initialize a trace session from a json file, and in the future will be able to initialize a trace session from a live process.

Besides, I'm renaming SettingsParser to SessionParser, which I think is a better name, as the json object represents a trace session of possibly many processes.

With the current set of targets, we have the following

- Trace: main interface for dealing with trace sessions
- TraceIntelPT: plugin Trace for dealing with intel pt sessions
- TraceIntelPTSessionParser: a parser of a json trace session file that can create a corresponding TraceIntelPT instance along with Targets, ProcessTraces (to be created in https://reviews.llvm.org/D88769), and ThreadIntelPT threads.
- ProcessTrace: (to be created in https://reviews.llvm.org/D88769) can handle the correct state of the traces as the user traverses the trace. I don't think there'll be a need an intel-pt specific implementation of this class.
- ThreadIntelPT: a thread implementation that can handle the decoding of its own trace file, along with keeping track of the current position the user is looking at when doing reverse debugging.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88841
2020-10-09 17:32:04 -07:00
Pavel Labath
19d64138e6 [lldb] Fix "frame var" for large bitfields
The problem here is in the "sliding" code in
ValueObjectChild::UpdateValue. It modifies m_bitfield_bit_offset and
m_value to ensure the bitfield value fits the window given by the
underlying type.

However, this is broken next time UpdateValue is called, because it
updates the m_value value from the parent. However, the value cannot be
slid again because the m_bitfield_bit_offset is already modified.

It seems this can happen only under specific circumstances. One way to
trigger is is to run an expression which can be interpreted (jitting it
causes a new StackFrame and ValueObject variables to be created).

I fix this bug by modifying m_byte_offset instead of m_scalar, and
ensuring the changes are folded into m_scalar regardless of how many
times UpdateValue is called.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88992
2020-10-08 18:42:50 +02:00
Alexandre Ganea
79809f58b0 [LLDB] On Windows, fix tests
This patch fixes a few issues seen when running `ninja check-lldb` in a Release build with VS2017:

- Some binaries couldn't be found (such as lldb-vscode.exe), because .exe wasn't appended to the file name.
- Many tests used to fail since our installed locale is in French - the OS error messages are not emitted in English.
- Our codepage being Windows-1252, python failed to decode some error messages with accentuations.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88975
2020-10-08 11:46:59 -04:00
Jim Ingham
be66987e20 Fix raciness in the StopHook check for "has the target run".
This was looking at the privateState, but it's possible that
the actual process has started up and then stopped again by the
time we get to the check, which would lead us to get out of running
the stop hooks too early.

Instead we need to track the intention of the stop hooks directly.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88753
2020-10-05 15:44:28 -07:00
Dave Lee
010d7a388b [lldb/test] Catch invalid calls to expect()
Add preconditions to `TestBase.expect()` that catch semantically invalid calls
that happen to succeed anyway. This also fixes the broken callsites caught by
these checks.

This prevents the following incorrect calls:

1. `self.expect("lldb command", "some substr")`
2. `self.expect("lldb command", "assert message", "some substr")`

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88792
2020-10-05 12:41:52 -07:00
David Spickett
71cf97e95b Reland "[lldb] Don't send invalid region addresses to lldb server"
This reverts commit c65627a1fe.

The test immediately after the new invalid symbol test was
failing on Windows. This was because when we called
VirtualQueryEx to get the region info for 0x0,
even if it succeeded we would call GetLastError.

Which must have picked up the last error that was set while
trying to lookup "not_an_address". Which happened to be 2.
("The system cannot find the file specified.")

To fix this only call GetLastError when we know VirtualQueryEx
has failed. (when it returns 0, which we were also checking for anyway)

Also convert memory region to an early return style
to make the logic clearer.

Reviewed By: labath, stella.stamenova

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88229
2020-10-05 11:50:29 +01:00
Raphael Isemann
15ea45f16b [lldb] Skip unique_ptr import-std-module tests on Linux
This seems to fail on ubuntu 18.04.5 with Clang 9 due to:

Error output:
error: Couldn't lookup symbols:
  std::__1::default_delete<int>::operator()(int) const
2020-10-01 23:04:36 +02:00
Raphael Isemann
cccb7cf1a5 [lldb] Add missing import for LLDB test decorators to TestStopHookScripted
This test wasn't using decorators before and was missing the import, so my
previous commit broke the test.
2020-10-01 14:33:13 +02:00
Raphael Isemann
b272250221 [lldb] Skip the flakey part of TestStopHookScripted on Linux
This test seems to randomly fail on Linux machines. It's only one part of the
test failing randomly, so let's just skip it instead of reverting the whole
patch (again).
2020-10-01 14:24:38 +02:00
Muhammad Omair Javaid
3d27a99b2e [LLDB] Remove AArch64/Linux xfail decorator from TestGuiBasicDebug
This test now passes on AArch64/Linux after following change by Jonas:
d689570d7d
2020-10-01 10:20:22 +05:00
Jonas Devlieghere
d689570d7d [lldb] Make TestGuiBasicDebug more lenient
Matt's change to the register allocator in 89baeaef2f changed where we
end up after the `finish`. Before we'd end up on line 4.

* thread #1, queue = 'com.apple.main-thread', stop reason = step out
Return value: (int) $0 = 1
    frame #0: 0x0000000100003f7d a.out`main(argc=1, argv=0x00007ffeefbff630) at main.c:4:3
   1    extern int func();
   2
   3    int main(int argc, char **argv) {
-> 4      func(); // Break here
   5      func(); // Second
   6      return 0;
   7    }

Now, we end up on line 5.

* thread #1, queue = 'com.apple.main-thread', stop reason = step out
Return value: (int) $0 = 1

    frame #0: 0x0000000100003f8d a.out`main(argc=1, argv=0x00007ffeefbff630) at main.c:5:3
   2
   3    int main(int argc, char **argv) {
   4      func(); // Break here
-> 5      func(); // Second
   6      return 0;
   7    }

Given that this is not expected stable to be stable I've made the test a
bit more lenient to accept both scenarios.
2020-09-30 17:06:47 -07:00
Jim Ingham
afaeb6af79 Fix crash in SBStructuredData::GetDescription() when there's no StructuredDataPlugin.
Also, use the StructuredData::Dump method to print the StructuredData if there
is no plugin, rather than just returning an error.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88266
2020-09-30 11:48:54 -07:00
Jordan Rupprecht
ad865d9d10 [lldb-vscode] Allow an empty 'breakpoints' field to clear breakpoints.
Per the DAP spec for SetBreakpoints [1], the way to clear breakpoints is: `To clear all breakpoint for a source, specify an empty array.`

However, leaving the breakpoints field unset is also a well formed request (note the `breakpoints?:` in the `SetBreakpointsArguments` definition). If it's unset, we have a couple choices:

1. Crash (current behavior)
2. Clear breakpoints
3. Return an error response that the breakpoints field is missing.

I propose we do (2) instead of (1), and treat an unset breakpoints field the same as an empty breakpoints field.

[1] https://microsoft.github.io/debug-adapter-protocol/specification#Requests_SetBreakpoints

Reviewed By: wallace, labath

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88513
2020-09-30 11:32:06 -07:00
Jordan Rupprecht
c3193e464c [lldb/ipv6] Support running lldb tests in an ipv6-only environment.
When running in an ipv6-only environment where `AF_INET` sockets are not available, many lldb tests (mostly gdb remote tests) fail because things like `127.0.0.1` don't work there.

Use `localhost` instead of `127.0.0.1` whenever possible, or include a fallback of creating `AF_INET6` sockets when `AF_INET` fails.

Reviewed By: labath

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87333
2020-09-30 11:08:41 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
154860af33 [lldb] Use config.lldb_src_root in lit_config.load_config (NFC)
Rather than relaying on CMake to substitute the full path to the lldb
source root, use the  value set in config.lldb_src_root. This makes it
slightly easier to write a custom lit.site.cfg.py.
2020-09-29 23:05:12 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
bd14d6ea15 [lldb] Hoist -s (trace directory) argument out of LLDB_TEST_COMMON_ARGS (NFC)
Give the trace directory argument its own variable
(LLDB_TEST_TRACE_DIRECTORY) so that we can configure it in
lit.site.cfg.py if we so desire.
2020-09-29 17:23:33 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
3c7070f1a6 [lldb] Hoist --server argument out of LLDB_TEST_COMMON_ARGS (NFC)
Give the server argument its own variable (LLDB_TEST_SERVER) so that we
can configure it in lit.site.cfg.py if we so desire.
2020-09-29 13:27:29 -07:00
Jim Ingham
1b1d981598 Revert "Revert "Add the ability to write target stop-hooks using the ScriptInterpreter.""
This reverts commit f775fe5964.

I fixed a return type error in the original patch that was causing a test failure.
Also added a REQUIRES: python to the shell test so we'll skip this for
people who build lldb w/o Python.
Also added another test for the error printing.
2020-09-29 12:01:14 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
ccbb9827db [lldb] Also configure lldb_framework_dir in the lit.site.cfg.py
Configuring the variable in CMake isn't enought, because the build mode
can't be resolved until execution time, which requires the build mode to
be substituted by lit.
2020-09-29 09:13:26 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
d0ed45dc92 [lldb] Configure LLDB_FRAMEWORK_DIR in multi-generator builds 2020-09-29 08:56:31 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
f775fe5964 Revert "Add the ability to write target stop-hooks using the ScriptInterpreter."
This temporarily reverts commit b65966cff6
while Jim figures out why the test is failing on the bots.
2020-09-28 09:04:32 -07:00
Raphael Isemann
cabee89bed [lldb] Reference STL types in import-std-module tests
With the recent patches to the ASTImporter that improve template type importing
(D87444), most of the import-std-module tests can now finally import the
type of the STL container they are testing. This patch removes most of the casts
that were added to simplify types to something the ASTImporter can import
(for example, std::vector<int>::size_type was casted to `size_t` until now).
Also adds the missing tests that require referencing the container type (for
example simply printing the whole container) as here we couldn't use a casting
workaround.

The only casts that remain are in the forward_list tests that reference
the iterator and the stack test. Both tests are still failing to import the
respective container type correctly (or crash while trying to import).
2020-09-28 10:37:03 +02:00
Raphael Isemann
070a1d562b [lldb] Remove nothreadallow from SWIG's __str__ wrappers to work around a Python>=3.7 crash
Usually when we enter a SWIG wrapper function from Python, SWIG automatically
adds a `Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS`/`Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS` around the call to the SB
API C++ function. This will ensure that Python's GIL is released when we enter
LLDB and locked again when we return to the wrapper code.

D51569 changed this behaviour but only for the generated `__str__` wrappers. The
added `nothreadallow` disables the injection of the GIL release/re-acquire code
and the GIL is now kept locked when entering LLDB and is expected to be still
locked when returning from the LLDB implementation. The main reason for that was
that back when D51569 landed the wrapper itself created a Python string. These
days it just creates a std::string and SWIG itself takes care of getting the GIL
and creating the Python string from the std::string, so that workaround isn't
necessary anymore.

This patch just removes `nothreadallow` so that our `__str__` functions now
behave like all other wrapper functions in that they release the GIL when
calling into the SB API implementation.

The motivation here is actually to work around another potential bug in LLDB.
When one calls into the LLDB SB API while holding the GIL and that call causes
LLDB to interpret some Python script via `ScriptInterpreterPython`, then the GIL
will be unlocked when the control flow returns from the SB API. In the case of
the `__str__` wrapper this would cause that the next call to a Python function
requiring the GIL would fail (as SWIG will not try to reacquire the GIL as it
isn't aware that LLDB removed it).

The reason for this unexpected GIL release seems to be a workaround for recent
Python versions:
```
    // The only case we should go further and acquire the GIL: it is unlocked.
    if (PyGILState_Check())
      return;
```

The early-exit here causes `InitializePythonRAII::m_was_already_initialized` to
be always false and that causes that `InitializePythonRAII`'s destructor always
directly unlocks the GIL via `PyEval_SaveThread`. I'm investigating how to
properly fix this bug in a follow up patch, but for now this straightforward
patch seems to be enough to unblock my other patches (and it also has the
benefit of removing this workaround).

The test for this is just a simple test for `std::deque` which has a synthetic
child provider implemented as a Python script. Inspecting the deque object will
cause `expect_expr` to create a string error message by calling
`str(deque_object)`. Printing the ValueObject causes the Python script for the
synthetic children to execute which then triggers the bug described above where
the GIL ends up being unlocked.

Reviewed By: JDevlieghere

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88302
2020-09-28 10:10:34 +02:00
Jim Ingham
b65966cff6 Add the ability to write target stop-hooks using the ScriptInterpreter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88123
2020-09-25 15:44:55 -07:00
Jason Molenda
1bec6eb3f5 Add support for firmware/standalone LC_NOTE "main bin spec" corefiles
When a Mach-O corefile has an LC_NOTE "main bin spec" for a
standalone binary / firmware, with only a UUID and no load
address, try to locate the binary and dSYM by UUID and if
found, load it at offset 0 for the user.

Add a test case that tests a firmware/standalone corefile
with both the "kern ver str" and "main bin spec" LC_NOTEs.

<rdar://problem/68193804>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88282
2020-09-25 15:19:22 -07:00
Walter Erquinigo
bddebca61e [intel-pt] Refactor the JSON parsing
Recently https://reviews.llvm.org/D88103 introduced a nice API for
converting a JSON object into C++ types, which include nice error
messaging.

I'm using that new functioniality to perform the parsing in a much more
elegant way. As a result, the code looks simpler and more maintainable,
as we aren't parsing anymore individual fields manually.

I updated the test cases accordingly.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88264
2020-09-24 16:35:34 -07:00
Joseph Tremoulet
4a55c98fa7 [lldb] Normalize paths in new test
The minidump-sysroot test I added in commit 20f84257 compares two paths
using a string comparison.  This causes the Windows buildbot to fail
because of mismatched forward slashes and backslashes.  Use
os.path.normcase to normalize before comparing.
2020-09-23 12:41:47 -07:00
Jim Ingham
3726ac41e9 Add breakpoint delete --disabled: deletes all disabled breakpoints.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88129
2020-09-23 11:35:11 -07:00
Joseph Tremoulet
20f84257ac [lldb] Fix GetRemoteSharedModule fallback logic
When the various methods of locating the module in GetRemoteSharedModule
fail, make sure we pass the original module spec to the bail-out call to
the provided resolver function.

Also make sure we consistently use the resolved module spec from the
various success paths.

Thanks to what appears to have been an accidentally inverted condition
(commit 85967fa applied the new condition to a path where GetModuleSpec
returns false, but should have applied it when GetModuleSpec returns
true), without this fix we only pass the original module spec in the
fallback if the original spec has no uuid (or has a uuid that somehow
matches the resolved module's uuid despite the call to GetModuleSpec
failing).  This manifested as a bug when processing a minidump file with
a user-provided sysroot, since in that case the resolver call was being
applied to resolved_module_spec (despite resolution failing), which did
not have the path of its file_spec set.

Reviewed By: JDevlieghere

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88099
2020-09-23 06:00:50 -07:00
Fangrui Song
f212122150 [lldb][test] Remove accidental import pdb in 783dc7dc7e 2020-09-22 13:08:12 -07:00
Raphael Isemann
ef7d22a986 Revert "[lldb] XFAIL TestMemoryHistory on Linux"
This reverts commit 7518006d75.

This test apparently works on the Swift CI ubuntu bot, so it shouldn't be
XFAIL'd on Linux.
2020-09-22 21:13:44 +02:00
Jonas Devlieghere
783dc7dc7e [lldb] Skip TestMiniDumpUUID with reproducers
The modules not getting orphaned is wreaking havoc when the UUIDs match
between tests.
2020-09-22 11:28:39 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
8457ae0d93 [lldb] Skip test_common_completion_process_pid_and_name with reproducers
This test launches a subprocess which will have a different PID during
capture and replay.
2020-09-22 11:28:39 -07:00
Raphael Isemann
b5e49e91cb [lldb] Ignore certain Clang type sugar when creating the type name
Clang has some type sugar that only serves as a way to preserve the way a user
has typed a certain type in the source code. These types are currently not
unwrapped when we query the type name for a Clang type, which means that this
type sugar actually influences what formatters are picked for a certain type.
Currently if a user decides to reference a type by doing `::GlobalDecl Var = 3;`,
the type formatter for `GlobalDecl` will not be used (as the type sugar
around the type gives it the name `::GlobalDecl`. The same goes for other ways
to spell out a type such as `auto` etc.

With this patch most of this type sugar gets stripped when the full type name is
calculated. Typedefs are not getting desugared as that seems counterproductive.
I also don't desugar atomic types as that's technically not type sugar.

Reviewed By: jarin

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87481
2020-09-22 13:37:20 +02:00
Jim Ingham
94b0d836a1 Fix reporting the lack of global variables in "target var".
There was a little thinko which meant when stopped in a frame with
debug information but whose CU didn't have any global variables we
report:

no debug info for frame <N>

This patch fixes that error message to say the intended:

no global variables in current compile unit

<rdar://problem/69086361>
2020-09-21 17:29:40 -07:00
Walter Erquinigo
74c93956e1 Add a "Trace" plug-in to LLDB to add process trace support in stages.
This is the first in a series of patches that will adds a new processor trace plug-in to LLDB.

The idea for this first patch to to add the plug-in interface with simple commands for the trace files that can "load" and "dump" the trace information. We can test the functionality and ensure people are happy with the way things are done and how things are organized before moving on to adding more functionality.

Processor trace information can be view in a few different ways:
- post mortem where a trace is saved off that can be viewed later in the debugger
- gathered while a process is running and allow the user to step back in time (with no variables, memory or registers) to see how each thread arrived at where it is currently stopped.

This patch attempts to start with the first solution of loading a trace file after the fact. The idea is that we will use a JSON file to load the trace information. JSON allows us to specify information about the trace like:
- plug-in name in LLDB
- path to trace file
- shared library load information so we can re-create a target and symbolicate the information in the trace
- any other info that the trace plug-in will need to be able to successfully parse the trace information
  - cpu type
  - version info
  - ???

A new "trace" command was added at the top level of the LLDB commmands:
- "trace load"
- "trace dump"

I did this because if we load trace information we don't need to have a process and we might end up creating a new target for the trace information that will become active. If anyone has any input on where this would be better suited, please let me know. Walter Erquinigo will end up filling in the Intel PT specific plug-in so that it works and is tested once we can agree that the direction of this patch is the correct one, so please feel free to chime in with ideas on comments!

Reviewed By: clayborg

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85705
2020-09-21 17:13:18 -07:00
shafik
6807f244fa [ASTImporter] Modifying ImportDeclContext(...) to ensure that we also handle the case when the FieldDecl is an ArrayType whose ElementType is a RecordDecl
When we fixed ImportDeclContext(...) in D71378 to make sure we complete each
FieldDecl of a RecordDecl when we are importing the definition we missed the
case where a FeildDecl was an ArrayType whose ElementType is a record.

This fix was motivated by a codegen crash during LLDB expression parsing. Since
we were not importing the definition we were crashing during layout which
required all the records be defined.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86660
2020-09-21 14:57:00 -07:00
David Spickett
c65627a1fe Revert "[lldb] Don't send invalid region addresses to lldb server"
This reverts commit c687af0c30
due to a test failure on Windows.
2020-09-17 13:07:44 +01:00
David Spickett
c687af0c30 [lldb] Don't send invalid region addresses to lldb server
Previously when <addr> in "memory region <addr>" didn't
parse correctly, we'd print an error then also ask lldb-server
for a region containing LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS.

(lldb) memory region not_an_address
error: invalid address argument "not_an_address"...
error: Server returned invalid range

Only send the command to lldb-server if the address
parsed correctly.

(lldb) memory region not_an_address
error: invalid address argument "not_an_address"...

Reviewed By: labath

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87694
2020-09-17 10:26:16 +01:00
Pavel Labath
af3789a188 [lldb] Improve qemu interop for aarch64
qemu calls the "fp" and "lr" registers via their generic names
(x29/x30). This mismatch manifested itself as not being able to unwind
or display values of some local variables.
2020-09-15 13:32:08 +02:00
Walter Erquinigo
132e57bc59 Retry of D84974
- Fix a small issue caused by a conflicting name (GetObject) on Windows.
  The fix was to rename the internal GetObject function to
  GetNextFunction.
2020-09-14 10:44:13 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
76e3a27c16 [lldb] Add test for CFMutableDictionaryRef
While writing a test for a change in Foundation I noticed we didn't yet
test CFMutableDictionaryRef.
2020-09-11 16:11:25 -07:00