bot. This happens because they are building a long result into
a Python string, and the asan checker is making that very slow.
The last two tests here are both slow, but the 'test_command' is the
really slow one. I'm going to start disabling just that one and see
if that gets the ASAN bots clean.
Currently a FileSpecList::FindFileIndex(...) will only match the specified FileSpec if:
- it has filename and directory and both match exactly
- if has a filename only and any filename in the list matches
Because of this, we modify our breakpoint resolving so it can handle relative paths by doing some extra code that removes the directory from the FileSpec when searching if the path is relative.
This patch is intended to fix breakpoints so they work as users expect them to by adding the following features:
- allow matches to relative paths in the file list to match as long as the relative path is at the end of the specified path at valid directory delimiters
- allow matches to paths to match if the specified path is relative and shorter than the file paths in the list
This allows us to remove the extra logic from BreakpointResolverFileLine.cpp that added support for setting breakpoints with relative paths.
This means we can still set breakpoints with relative paths when the debug info contains full paths. We add the ability to set breakpoints with full paths when the debug info contains relative paths.
Debug info contains "./a/b/c/main.cpp", the following will set breakpoints successfully:
- /build/a/b/c/main.cpp
- a/b/c/main.cpp
- b/c/main.cpp
- c/main.cpp
- main.cpp
- ./c/main.cpp
- ./a/b/c/main.cpp
- ./b/c/main.cpp
- ./main.cpp
This also ensures that we won't match partial directory names, if a relative path is in the list or is used for the match, things must match at the directory level.
The breakpoint resolving code will now use the new FileSpecList::FindCompatibleIndex(...) function to allow this fuzzy matching to work for breakpoints.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130401
This commit combines the initial commit (7c240de609af), a fix for x86_64 Linux
(3a0581501e76) and a fix for thinko in a last minute rewrite that I really
should have run the testsuite on.
Also, make sure that all the "I need to step over watchpoint" plans execute
before we call a public stop. Otherwise, e.g. if you have N watchpoints and
a Signal, the signal stop info will get us to stop with the watchpoints in a
half-done state.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130674
This check is clearly incorrect, there's no way you should have an
eStateConnected event left on the queue if you've already launched
and hit a breakpoint in the program. This check fails running remotely
on Darwin systems and on one remote Linux platform. And if we do
find this failing somewhere, we should fix the bogus eStateConnected,
not the test.
Make TestModuleLoadedNotifys work with a dyld from the expanded shared
cache in the DeviceSupport directory. In that case the module path is:
~/Library/Developer/Xcode/iOS DeviceSupport/<...>/Symbols/usr/lib/dyld
instead of just:
/usr/lib/dyld
This makes the test pass when running against an embedded Darwin device.
Add a function to make it easier to debug a test failure caused by an
unexpected stop reason. This is similar to the assertState helper that
was added in ce825e4674.
Before:
self.assertEqual(stop_reason, lldb.eStopReasonInstrumentation)
AssertionError: 5 != 10
After:
self.assertStopReason(stop_reason, lldb.eStopReasonInstrumentation)
AssertionError: signal (5) != instrumentation (10)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131083
Currently, lldb-server was opening the executable file to determine the
process architecture (to differentiate between 32 and 64 bit
architecture flavours). This isn't a particularly trustworthy source of
information (the file could have been changed since the process was
started) and it is not always available (file could be deleted or
otherwise inaccessible).
Unfortunately, ptrace does not give us a direct API to access the
process architecture, but we can still infer it via some of its
responses -- given that the general purpose register set of 64-bit
applications is larger [citation needed] than the GPR set of 32-bit
ones, we can just ask for the application GPR set and check its size.
This is what this patch does.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130985
- Fix a typo in the function that never returns a significant value
- Add unit tests for the getters/setters in SBBreakpointLocation
- Verified the newly added unit test succeeds after the fix:
llvm-lit -sv lldb/test/API/functionalities/breakpoint/breakpoint_locations/TestBreakpointLocations.py
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130660
The DumpDataExtractor function had two branches for printing floating
point values. One branch (APFloat) was used if we had a Target object
around and could query it for the appropriate semantics. If we didn't
have a Target, we used host operations to read and format the value.
This patch changes second path to use APFloat as well. To make it work,
I pick reasonable defaults for different byte size. Notably, I did not
include x87 long double in that list (as it is ambibuous and
architecture-specific). This exposed a bug where we were printing
register values using the target-less branch, even though the registers
definitely belong to a target, and we had it available. Fixing this
prompted the update of several tests for register values due to slightly
different floating point outputs.
The most dubious aspect of this patch is the change in
TypeSystemClang::GetFloatTypeSemantics to recognize `10` as a valid size
for x87 long double. This was necessary because because sizeof(long
double) on x86_64 is 16 even though it only holds 10 bytes of useful
data. This generalizes the hackaround present in the target-free branch
of the dumping function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129750
This is required in preparation for the follow-up patch which adds
support for evaluating expressions from within C++ lambdas. In such
cases we need to materialize variables which are not part of the
current frame but instead are ivars on a 'this' pointer of the current
frame.
Update the process ID after handling fork/vfork to ensure that
the process plugin reports the correct PID immediately.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130037
This patch adds support for formatting `std::map::const_iterator`.
It's just a matter of adding `const_` to the existing regex.
**Testing**
* Added test case to existing API tests
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129962
This reverts commit 5778ada8e5.
The watchpoint tests all stall on aarch64-ubuntu bots. Reverting till I can
get my hands on an system to test this out.
Since we want to present the "new & old" values for watchpoint hits, on architectures,
including the ARM family, that stop before the triggering instruction is run, we need
to single step over the instruction before stopping for realz. This was incorrectly
done directly in the StopInfoWatchpoint::ShouldStop. That causes problems if more than
one thread stops "for a reason" at the same time as the watchpoint, since the other actions
didn't expect the process to make progress in this part of the execution control machinery.
The correct way to do this is to schedule the step over using ThreadPlans, and then to restore
the stop info after that plan stops, so that the rest of the stop info actions can happen when
all the other threads have handled their immediate actions as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129814
This patch fixes marks TestLoadUnload.test_static_init_during_load as
xfail for AArch64 windows. It is failing similar to Linux and already
marked xfail for linux.
This patch adds a formatter for libcxx's `std::unordered_map` iterators.
The implementation follows a similar appraoch to the `std::map` iterator
formatter. I was hesistant about coupling the two into a common
implementation since the libcxx layouts might change for one of the
the containers but not the other.
All `std::unordered_map` iterators are covered with this patch:
1. const/non-const key/value iterators
2. const/non-const bucket iterators
Note that, we currently don't have a formatter for `std::unordered_map`.
This patch doesn't change that, we merely add support for its iterators,
because that's what Xcode users requested. One can still see contents
of `std::unordered_map`, whereas with iterators it's less ergonomic.
**Testing**
* Added API test
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129364
The requirements for "thread until <line number>" are:
a) If any code contributed by <line number> or the nearest subsequent of <line number> is executed before leaving the function, stop
b) If you end up leaving the function w/o triggering (a), then stop
In case of (a), since the <line number> may have multiple entries in the line table and the compiler might have scheduled/moved the relevant code across, and the lldb does not know the control flow, set breakpoints on all the line table entries of best match of <line number> i.e. exact or the nearest subsequent line.
Along with the above, currently, CommandObjectThreadUntil is also setting the breakpoints on all the subsequent line numbers after the best match and this latter part is wrong.
This issue is discussed at http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2018-August/013979.html.
In fact, currently `TestStepUntil.py` is not actually testing step until scenarios and `test_missing_one` test fails without this patch if tests are made to run. Fixed the test as well.
Reviewed By: jingham
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50304
Previously we recorded AllocationBase as the base address of the region
we get from VirtualQueryEx. However, this is the base of the allocation,
which can later be split into more regions.
So you got stuff like:
[0x00007fff377c0000-0x00007fff377c1000) r-- PECOFF header
[0x00007fff377c0000-0x00007fff37840000) r-x .text
[0x00007fff377c0000-0x00007fff37870000) r-- .rdata
Where all the base addresses were the same.
Instead, use BaseAddress as the base of the region. So we get:
[0x00007fff377c0000-0x00007fff377c1000) r-- PECOFF header
[0x00007fff377c1000-0x00007fff37840000) r-x .text
[0x00007fff37840000-0x00007fff37870000) r-- .rdata
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winnt/ns-winnt-memory_basic_information
The added test checks for any overlapping regions which means
if we get the base or size wrong it'll fail. This logic
applies to any OS so the test isn't restricted to Windows.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129272
After 82ba3f4, we (again) need to call lldb_enable_attach to be able to
attach to processes on linux. This was a new test, so it does not have
the necessary boilerplate.
This is a follow up on my last commit where one of the decorator was
left unremoved.
This patch removes Xfail decorator from TestLoadUnload.py as it is now
passing on Arm/Linux buildbot.
This test has some race condition which is making it hang on LLDB
Arm/AArch64 Linux buildbot. I am marking it as skipped until we
investigate whats going wrong.
LLDB fails to step in/out/over code with missing debug information.
This is only reproducible on AArch64/Windows. I have reported a issue
upstream at llvm.org/pr56292
This patch Xfail TestStepNoDebug.py for AArch64/Windows.
Checking whether a formatter change does not break some of the supported
string layouts is difficult because it requires tracking down and/or
building different versions and build configurations of the library.
The purpose of this patch is to avoid that by providing an in-tree
simulation of the string class. It is a reduced version of the real
string class, obtained by elimitating all non-trivial code, leaving
just the internal data structures used by the data formatter. Different
versions of the class can be simulated through preprocessor defines.
The test (ab)uses the fact that our formatters kick in for any
double-underscore sub-namespace of `std`, so it avoids colliding with
the real string class by declaring the test class in the std::__lldb
namespace.
I do not consider this to be a replacement for the existing data
formatter tests, as producing this kind of a test is not trivial, and it
is easy to make a mistake in the process. However, it's also not
realistic to expect that every person changing the data formatter will
test it against all versions of the real class, so I think it can be
useful as a first line of defence.
Adding support for new layouts can become particularly unwieldy, but
this complexity will also be reflected in the actual code, so if we find
ourselves needing to support too many variants, we may need to start
dropping support for old ones, or come up with a completely different
strategy.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124155
not to be hit. But another thread might be hit at the same time and
actually stop. So we have to be sure to switch the first thread's
stop info to eStopReasonNone or we'll report a hit when the condition
failed, which is confusing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128776
This is currently being done in an ad hoc way, and so for some
commands it isn't being checked. We have the info to make this check,
since commands are supposed to add their arguments to the m_arguments
field of the CommandObject. This change uses that info to check whether
the command received arguments in error.
A handful of commands weren't defining their argument types, I also had
to fix them. And a bunch of commands were checking for arguments by
hand, so I removed those checks in favor of the CommandObject one. That
also meant I had to change some tests that were checking for the ad hoc
error outputs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128453
The requirements for "thread until <line number>" are:
a) If any code contributed by <line number> or the nearest subsequent of <line number> is executed before leaving the function, stop
b) If you end up leaving the function w/o triggering (a), then stop
In case of (a), since the <line number> may have multiple entries in the line table and the compiler might have scheduled/moved the relevant code across, and the lldb does not know the control flow, set breakpoints on all the line table entries of best match of <line number> i.e. exact or the nearest subsequent line.
Along with the above, currently, CommandObjectThreadUntil is also setting the breakpoints on all the subsequent line numbers after the best match and this latter part is wrong.
This issue is discussed at http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2018-August/013979.html.
In fact, currently `TestStepUntil.py` is not actually testing step until scenarios and `test_missing_one` test fails without this patch if tests are made to run. Fixed the test as well.
Reviewed By: jingham
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50304
Eliminate boilerplate of having each test manually assign to `mydir` by calling
`compute_mydir` in lldbtest.py.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128077
NativeProcessLinux is not able to properly read libraries-svr4 data when
running with ld.so as the "main" executable. Normally, this is not a big
problem, as it returns an error message, and lldb can fallback to manual
library loading.
Unfortunately, lldb-server also does not clear cached svr4 data on exec,
which means that it does *not* return an error when the application
execs from the "regular" to the "ld.so" mode. Instead it returns
incorrect data (it is missing the main executable) and causes
TestDyldExecLinux to fail (but only when building with xml support
enabled).
This patch makes ensures that cached process data is cleared on exec,
fixing the test. Since TestDyldExecLinux has shown to be sensitive to
the way we read library info, I fork it into two (with svr4 enabled and
disabled).
This patch adds a libcxx formatter for std::span. The
implementation is based on the libcxx formatter for
std::vector. The main difference is the fact that
std::span conditionally has a __size member based
on whether it has a static or dynamic extent.
Example output of formatted span:
(std::span<const int, 18446744073709551615>) $0 = size=6 {
[0] = 0
[1] = 1
[2] = 2
[3] = 3
[4] = 4
[5] = 5
}
The second template parameter here is actually std::dynamic_extent,
but the type declaration we get back from the TypeSystemClang is the
actual value (which in this case is (size_t)-1). This is consistent
with diagnostics from clang, which doesn't desugar this value either.
E.g.,:
span.cpp:30:31: error: implicit instantiation of undefined template
'Undefined<std::span<int, 18446744073709551615>>'
Testing:
Added API-tests
Confirmed manually using LLDB cli that printing spans works in various scenarios
Patch by Michael Buch!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127481
Add a function to make it easier to debug a test failure caused by an
unexpected state.
Currently, tests are using assertEqual which results in a cryptic error
message: "AssertionError: 5 != 10". Even when a test provides a message
to make it clear why a particular state is expected, you still have to
figure out which of the two was the expected state, and what the other
value corresponds to.
We have a function in lldbutil that helps you convert the state number
into a user readable string. This patch adds a wrapper around
assertEqual specifically for comparing states and reporting better error
messages.
The aforementioned error message now looks like this: "AssertionError:
stopped (5) != exited (10)". If the user provided a message, that
continues to get printed as well.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127355
On macOS Ventura and later, dyld and the main binary will be loaded
again when dyld moves itself into the shared cache. Update the test
accordingly.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127331