Commit Graph

2522 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jonas Devlieghere
3ebb33632a [lldb] Complete OptionValue cleanup (NFC)
Make the `Get.*Value` and `Set.*Value` function private and migrate the
last remaining call sites to the new overloaded/templated functions.
2023-05-14 20:18:47 -07:00
Jim Ingham
e19387e693 We can't let GetStackFrameCount get interrupted or it will give the
wrong answer. Plus, it's useful in some places to have a way to force
the full stack to be created even in the face of
interruption. Moreover, most of the time when you're just getting
frames, you don't need to know the number of frames in the stack to
start with. You just keep calling
Thread::GetStackFrameAtIndex(index++) and when you get a null
StackFrameSP back, you're done. That's also more amenable to
interruption if you are doing some work frame by frame.

So this patch makes GetStackFrameCount always return the full count,
suspending interruption. I also went through all the places that use
GetStackFrameCount to make sure that they really needed the full stack
walk. In many cases, they did not. For instance frame select -r 10 was
getting the number of frames just to check whether cur_frame_idx + 10
was within the stack. It's better in that case to see if that frame
exists first, since that doesn't force a full stack walk, and only
deal with walking off the end of the stack if it doesn't...

I also added a test for some of these behaviors.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150236
2023-05-11 14:48:54 -07:00
walter erquinigo
9f5ef42cbd [LLDB] Add minimal support for the new Mojo language
Modular just announced a new language called Mojo. This patch adds an entry in the language list in LLDB for minimal support (e.g. being able to create a TypeSystem for this language). We will later add debug info entries when the language matures.
2023-05-05 20:35:19 -05:00
Jonas Devlieghere
81f9c4323b [lldb] Migrate to GetPropertyAtIndexAs for ArchSpec (NFC)
Use the templated GetPropertyAtIndexAs helper for ArchSpec.
2023-05-05 14:43:59 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
0f9c08f1b2 [lldb] Migrate to GetPropertyAtIndexAs for LanguageType (NFC)
Use the templated GetPropertyAtIndexAs helper for LanguageType.
2023-05-05 14:43:58 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
300dce986f [lldb] Migrate to GetPropertyAtIndexAs for FileSpecList (NFC)
Use the templated GetPropertyAtIndexAs helper for FileSpecList.
2023-05-04 22:24:23 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
ab73a9c1a7 [lldb] Eliminate {Get,Set}PropertyAtIndexAsFileSpec (NFC)
This patch is a continuation of 6f8b33f6df and eliminates the
{Get,Set}PropertyAtIndexAsFileSpec functions.
2023-05-04 22:10:28 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
6f8b33f6df [lldb] Use templates to simplify {Get,Set}PropertyAtIndex (NFC)
Use templates to simplify {Get,Set}PropertyAtIndex. It has always
bothered me how cumbersome those calls are when adding new properties.
After this patch, SetPropertyAtIndex infers the type from its arguments
and GetPropertyAtIndex required a single template argument for the
return value. As an added benefit, this enables us to remove a bunch of
wrappers from UserSettingsController and OptionValueProperties.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D149774
2023-05-04 16:42:46 -07:00
Jim Ingham
c2be702104 Allow scripted thread plans to modify the thread stop description when
they are completed.
2023-05-03 10:52:12 -07:00
Alex Langford
c4f3f5225d [lldb] Remove FileSpec::GetLastPathComponent
As far as I can tell, this just computes the filename of the FileSpec,
which is already conveniently stored in m_filename. We can use
FileSpec::GetFilename() instead.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D149663
2023-05-02 17:21:33 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
30c1f31274 [lldb] Fix 8be139fc12 for propery value changes
Fix 8be139fc12 for mid-air collision with the propery value changes.
2023-05-02 11:09:53 -07:00
Ilya Kuklin
8be139fc12 [lldb] Add settings for expression evaluation memory allocations.
Expression evaluation allocates memory for storing intermediate data during evaluation. For it to work properly it has to be allocated within target's available address space, for example within first 0xFFFF bytes for the 16-bit MSP430. The memory for such targets can be very tightly packed, but not all targets support GetMemoryRegionInfo API to pick an unused region, like MSP430 with MSPDebug GDB server.

These settings allow the programmer to manually pick precisely where and how much memory to allocate for expression evaluation in order not to overlap with existing data in process memory.

Reviewed By: bulbazord

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D149262
2023-05-02 11:02:44 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
611bd6c6ae [lldb] Make exe_ctx an optional argument in OptionValueProperties (NFC)
The majority of call sites are nullptr as the execution context.
Refactor OptionValueProperties to make the argument optional and
simplify all the callers.
2023-05-02 10:36:11 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
ddd9358bca [lldb] Remove unused will_modify argument (NFC)
Various OptionValue related classes are passing around will_modify but
the value is never used. This patch simplifies the interfaces by
removing the redundant argument.
2023-05-02 00:20:34 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
9c48aa68f4 [lldb] Refactor OptionValueProperties to return a std::optional (NFC)
Similar to fdbe7c7faa, refactor OptionValueProperties to return a
std::optional instead of taking a fail value. This allows the caller to
handle situations where there's no value, instead of being unable to
distinguish between the absence of a value and the value happening the
match the fail value. When a fail value is required,
std::optional::value_or() provides the same functionality.
2023-05-01 21:46:32 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
b12b35ad4b [lldb] Add debugger.external-editor setting
Add a new setting (debugger.external-editor) to specify an external
editor. The setting takes precedence over the existing
LLDB_EXTERNAL_EDITOR environment variable.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D149565
2023-05-01 14:11:11 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
13dbc16b4d [lldb] Refactor host::OpenFileInExternalEditor
This patch refactors the macOS implementation of
OpenFileInExternalEditor. It fixes an AppleEvent memory leak, the
caching of LLDB_EXTERNAL_EDITOR and speculatively fixes a crash when
CFURL is NULL (rdar://108633464). The new code also improves error
handling, readability and documents calls to the CoreFoundation Launch
Services APIs.

A bunch of the Launch Services APIs have been deprecated
(LSFindApplicationForInfo, LSOpenURLsWithRole). The preferred API is
LSOpenCFURLRef but it doesn't specifying the "location" Apple Event
which is used to highlight the current line and switching over would
regress the existing behavior.

rdar://108633464

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D149482
2023-04-28 18:12:41 -07:00
Med Ismail Bennani
482a0ad5ba [lldb] Improve logging for process state change (NFC)
This patch improves process state change logging messages to include to
process plugin name.

It also replaces the `LLDB_LOGF` macro by `LLDB_LOG` macro that adds the
class and method name in the log message using the compiler instead of
having to change the string litteral for every method.

This is very useful when investigating interactions between different
types of process plugins. That comes very handy when investigating bugs
related to interactive scripted process debugging.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148399

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
2023-04-25 15:02:34 -07:00
Med Ismail Bennani
6382fcb16d [lldb/Utility] Add opt-in shadow mode to event listeners
This patch augments lldb's event listeners with a new shadow mode.

As the name suggests, this mode allows events to be copied to an
additional listener to perform event monitoring, without interferring
with the event life cycle.

One of our use case for this, is to be able to listen to public process
events while making sure the events will still be delivered to the
default process listener (the debugger listener in most cases).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148397

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
2023-04-25 15:02:34 -07:00
walter erquinigo
59a39c2fc9 [LLDB][REPL] Destroy the repl instances correctly
This change ensures that the REPL map inside Target is destroyed correctly when `Target::Destroy()` is invoked. Not doing so results in the REPL not finishing its job when the debugger is initialized in REPL mode reading from a file. In my particular case, my REPL doesn't print the stdout of the last expression in the input file unless I include this change.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D149180
2023-04-25 15:09:08 -05:00
Jim Ingham
076341d108 Make sure SelectMostRelevantFrame happens only when returning to the user.
This is a user facing action, it is meant to focus the user's attention on
something other than the 0th frame when you stop somewhere where that's
helpful. For instance, stopping in pthread_kill after an assert will select
the assert frame.

This is not something you want to have happen internally in lldb, both
because internally you really don't want the selected frame changing out
from under you, and because the recognizers can do arbitrary work, and that
can cause deadlocks or other unexpected behavior.

However, it's not something that the current code does
explicitly after a stop has been delivered, it's expected to happen implicitly
as part of stopping. I changing this to call SMRF explicitly after a user
stop, but that got pretty ugly quickly.

So I added a bool to control whether to run this and audited all the current
uses to determine whether we're returning to the user or not.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148863
2023-04-21 14:21:25 -07:00
Jie Fu
c5fc7809e0 [lldb] Fix -Wctad-maybe-unsupported in PathMappingList.cpp (NFC)
/home/jiefu/llvm-project/lldb/source/Target/PathMappingList.cpp:51:5: error: 'scoped_lock' may not intend to support class template argument deduction [-Werror,-Wctad-maybe-unsupported]
    std::scoped_lock locks(m_mutex, rhs.m_mutex);
    ^
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/12/../../../../include/c++/12/mutex:692:11: note: add a deduction guide to suppress this warning
    class scoped_lock
          ^
/home/jiefu/llvm-project/lldb/source/Target/PathMappingList.cpp:72:3: error: 'scoped_lock' may not intend to support class template argument deduction [-Werror,-Wctad-maybe-unsupported]
  std::scoped_lock locks(m_mutex, rhs.m_mutex);
  ^
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/12/../../../../include/c++/12/mutex:692:11: note: add a deduction guide to suppress this warning
    class scoped_lock
          ^
2 errors generated.
2023-04-21 11:59:38 +08:00
Med Ismail Bennani
a4f160dfc1 [lldb] Fix bug to update process public run lock with process state
This patch should address an issue that caused the process public run
lock to not be updated during a process launch/attach when the process
stops.

That caused the public run lock to report its state as running while the
process state is stopped. This prevents the users to interact with the
process (through the command line or via the SBAPI) since it's
considered still running.

To address that, this patch refactors the name of the internal hijack
listeners to a specific pattern `lldb.internal.<action>.hijack` that
are used to ensure that we've attached to or launched a process successfully.

Then, when updating the process public state, after updating the state
value, if the process is not hijacked externally, meaning if the process
doens't have a hijack listener that matches the internal hijack
listeners pattern, we can update the public run lock accordingly.

rdar://108283017

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148400

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
2023-04-19 16:54:57 -07:00
Alex Langford
96a800c07f [lldb] Change setting descriptions to use StringRef instead of ConstString
These probably do not need to be in the ConstString StringPool as they
don't really need any of the advantages that ConstStrings offer.
Lifetime for these things is always static and we never need to perform
comparisons for setting descriptions.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148679
2023-04-19 14:45:02 -07:00
Med Ismail Bennani
f2f37557e7 Revert "[lldb] Fix bug to update process public run lock with process state"
This reverts commit 14f00213b2.
2023-04-19 10:46:33 -07:00
Med Ismail Bennani
14f00213b2 [lldb] Fix bug to update process public run lock with process state
This patch should address an issue that caused the process public run
lock to not be updated during a process launch/attach when the process
stops.

That caused the public run lock to report its state as running while the
process state is stopped. This prevents the users to interact with the
process (through the command line or via the SBAPI) since it's
considered still running.

To address that, this patch refactors the name of the internal hijack
listeners to a specific pattern `lldb.internal.<action>.hijack` that
are used to ensure that we've attached to or launched a process successfully.

Then, when updating the process public state, after updating the state
value, if the process is not hijacked externally, meaning if the process
doens't have a hijack listener that matches the internal hijack
listeners pattern, we can update the public run lock accordingly.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148400

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
2023-04-19 10:04:56 -07:00
Ilya Kuklin
81beb15d7e [lldb] Add support for MSP430 in LLDB.
Add MSP430 to the list of available targets, implement MSP430 ABI, add support for debugging targets with 16-bit address size.

The update is intended for use with MSPDebug, a GDB server implementation for MSP430.

Reviewed By: bulbazord, DavidSpickett

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D146965
2023-04-17 16:03:35 -07:00
Alex Langford
43ac269bdd [lldb] Lock accesses to PathMappingLists's internals
This class is not safe in multithreaded code. It's possible for one
thread to modify a PathMappingList's `m_pair` vector while another
thread is iterating over it, effectively invalidating the iterator and
potentially leading to crashes or other difficult-to-diagnose bugs.

rdar://107695786

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148380
2023-04-17 14:48:16 -07:00
Anton Korobeynikov
8456120623 Revert "[lldb] Add support for MSP430 in LLDB."
This reverts commit 82c02b733c.

Apparently, the original patch was not rebased onto `main
2023-04-17 11:30:27 -07:00
Anton Korobeynikov
82c02b733c [lldb] Add support for MSP430 in LLDB.
Add MSP430 to the list of available targets, implement MSP430 ABI, add support for debugging targets with 16-bit address size.

The update is intended for use with MSPDebug, a GDB server implementation for MSP430.

Reviewed By: bulbazord, DavidSpickett

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D146965
2023-04-17 11:05:09 -07:00
David Spickett
2ad771cf7b [lldb] Change some pointers to refs in register printing code
No one was passing nullptr for these.

Reviewed By: JDevlieghere

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148228
2023-04-17 07:40:13 +00:00
Michael Buch
89cd0e8c26 [lldb] Allow evaluating expressions in C++20 mode
This patch allows users to evaluate expressions using
`expr -l c++20`. Currently DWARF keeps the CU's at
`DW_AT_language` at `DW_LANG_C_plus_plus_14` even
when compiling with `-std=c++20`. So even in "C++20
programs" expression evaluation will by default be
performed in `C++11` mode for now.

Enabling `C++14` has been previously attempted at
https://reviews.llvm.org/D80308

There are some remaining issues around evaluating C++20
expressions. Mainly, lack of support for C++20 AST nodes in
`clang::ASTImporter`. But these can be addressed in follow-up
patches.
2023-04-14 17:10:18 +01:00
Michael Buch
0301a492f4 [lldb][Language] Add more language types
Adds more languages to the `language_names` list in
preparation for adding support for C++20 expression
evaluation.

The language constants were taken from the DWARFv5
constants defined in LLVM's `Dwarf.def`. Two vendor
constants overlap with the DWARFv5 constants so bump
their values. Their actual value is not important,
whereas keeping the enum values consecutive is (since
they are used for array lookups).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143061
2023-04-14 17:10:17 +01:00
David Spickett
e07a421dd5 [lldb] Show register fields using bitfield struct types
This change uses the information from target.xml sent by
the GDB stub to produce C types that we can use to print
register fields.

lldb-server *does not* produce this information yet. This will
only work with GDB stubs that do. gdbserver or qemu
are 2 I know of. Testing is added that uses a mocked lldb-server.
```
(lldb) register read cpsr x0 fpcr fpsr x1
    cpsr = 0x60001000
         = (N = 0, Z = 1, C = 1, V = 0, TCO = 0, DIT = 0, UAO = 0, PAN = 0, SS = 0, IL = 0, SSBS = 1, BTYPE = 0, D = 0, A = 0, I = 0, F = 0, nRW = 0, EL = 0, SP = 0)
```

Only "register read" will display fields, and only when
we are not printing a register block.

For example, cpsr is a 32 bit register. Using the target's scratch type
system we construct a type:
```
struct __attribute__((__packed__)) cpsr {
  uint32_t N : 1;
  uint32_t Z : 1;
  ...
  uint32_t EL : 2;
  uint32_t SP : 1;
};
```

If this register had unallocated bits in it, those would
have been filled in by RegisterFlags as anonymous fields.
A new option "SetChildPrintingDecider" is added so we
can disable printing those.

Important things about this type:
* It is packed so that sizeof(struct cpsr) == sizeof(the real register).
  (this will hold for all flags types we create)
* Each field has the same storage type, which is the same as the type
  of the raw register value. This prevents fields being spilt over
  into more storage units, as is allowed by most ABIs.
* Each bitfield size matches that of its register field.
* The most significant field is first.

The last point is required because the most significant bit (MSB)
being on the left/top of a print out matches what you'd expect to
see in an architecture manual. In addition, having lldb print a
different field order on big/little endian hosts is not acceptable.

As a consequence, if the target is little endian we have to
reverse the order of the fields in the value. The value of each field
remains the same. For example 0b01 doesn't become 0b10, it just shifts
up or down.

This is needed because clang's type system assumes that for a struct
like the one above, the least significant bit (LSB) will be first
for a little endian target. We need the MSB to be first.

Finally, if lldb's host is a different endian to the target we have
to byte swap the host endian value to match the endian of the target's
typesystem.

| Host Endian | Target Endian | Field Order Swap | Byte Order Swap |
|-------------|---------------|------------------|-----------------|
| Little      | Little        | Yes              | No              |
| Big         | Little        | Yes              | Yes             |
| Little      | Big           | No               | Yes             |
| Big         | Big           | No               | No              |

Testing was done as follows:
* Little -> Little
  * LE AArch64 native debug.
* Big -> Little
  * s390x lldb running under QEMU, connected to LE AArch64 target.
* Little -> Big
  * LE AArch64 lldb connected to QEMU's GDB stub, which is running
    an s390x program.
* Big -> Big
 * s390x lldb running under QEMU, connected to another QEMU's GDB
   stub, which is running an s390x program.

As we are not allowed to link core code to plugins directly,
I have added a new plugin RegisterTypeBuilder. There is one implementation
of this, RegisterTypeBuilderClang, which uses TypeSystemClang to build
the CompilerType from the register fields.

Reviewed By: jasonmolenda

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D145580
2023-04-13 13:04:34 +00:00
David Spickett
54981bb75d [lldb] Read register fields from target XML
This teaches ProcessGDBRemote to look for "flags" nodes
in the target XML that tell you what fields a register has.

https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Target-Description-Format.html

It will check for various invalid inputs like:
* Flags nodes with 0 fields in them.
* Start or end being > the register size.
* Fields that overlap.
* Required properties not being present (e.g. no name).
* Flag sets being redefined.

If anything untoward is found, we'll just drop the field or the
flag set altogether. Register fields are a "nice to have" so LLDB
shouldn't be crashing because of them, instead just log anything
we throw away. So the user can fix their XML/file a bug with their
vendor.

Once that is done it will sort the fields and pass them to
the RegisterFields class I added previously.

There is no way to see these fields yet, so tests for this code
will come later when the formatting code is added.

The fields are stored in a map of unique pointers on the
ProcessGDBRemote class. It will give out raw pointers on the
assumption that the GDB process lives longer than the users
of those pointers do. Which means RegisterInfo is still a trivial struct
but we are properly destroying the fields when the GDB process ends.

We can't store the fields directly in the map because adding new
items may cause its storage to be reallocated, which would invalidate
pointers we've already given out.

Reviewed By: jasonmolenda, JDevlieghere

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D145574
2023-04-13 12:34:14 +00:00
David Spickett
57c8fee1b9 [lldb] Add dummy field to RegisterInfo for register flags use later
This structure is supposed to be trivial, so we cannot simply do
"= nullptr;" on the new member. Doing that means you are non trivial,
regardless of whether you emulate the previously implied constructor somehow.

The next option is to update every use of brace initialisation.

Given that this is some hundreds of lines, this change just adds a dummy
pointer that is set to nullptr. Subsequent changes will actually use that
to point to register flags information.

Note: This change is not clang-format-ted because it changes a bunch of
areas that are not themselves formatted. It would just add noise.

Reviewed By: jasonmolenda, JDevlieghere

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D145568
2023-04-13 11:30:00 +00:00
David Spickett
6ea45e3007 [lldb] Add RegisterFlags class
This models the "flags" node from GDB's target XML:
https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Target-Description-Format.html

This node is used to describe the fields of registers like cpsr on AArch64.

RegisterFlags is a class that contains a list of register fields.
These fields will be extracted from the XML sent by the remote.

We assume that there is at least one field, that the fields are
sorted in descending order and do not overlap. That will be
enforced by the XML processor (the GDB client code in our case).

The fields may not cover the whole register. To account for this
RegisterFields will add anonymous padding fields so that
sizeof(all fields) == sizeof(register). This will save a lot
of hasssle later.

Reviewed By: jasonmolenda, JDevlieghere

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D145566
2023-04-13 10:54:52 +00:00
Jason Molenda
e38b0fa83a Remove AArch64 out of MIPS watchpoint-skip, doc wp description
Watchpoints from lldb-server are sent in the stop info packet
as a `reason:watchpoint` and `description:asciihex` keys; the
latter's asciihex has one to three integer values.  This patch
documents the purpose of those three different numbers, and
clarifies the behavior on MIPS with the third number which is
outside the range of any watched memory range means to silently
skip the watchpoint.

lldb was previously using this silently skip watchpoint behavior
for AArch64 as well, but in the case of AArch64 we see a watchpoint
address outside of a watched memory range when the write BEGINS
before the watched memory range, but extends in to it.  We don't
want to silently skip these.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D147816
rdar://83996471
2023-04-12 17:57:21 -07:00
Alex Langford
6ebf1bc66b [lldb] Change return type of EventData::GetFlavor
There's no reason these strings need to be in the ConstString
StringPool, they're already string literals with static lifetime.

I plan on addressing other similar functions in follow up commits.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D147833
2023-04-11 10:49:17 -07:00
Jim Ingham
730c8e160c [lldb] Move "SelectMostRelevantFrame" from Thread::WillStop
SelectMostRelevantFrame triggers the StackFrameRecognizer construction,
which can run arbitrary Python code, call expressions etc. WillStop gets
called on every private stop while the recognizers are a user-facing
feature, so first off doing this work on every stop is inefficient. But
more importantly, you can get in to situations where the recognizer
causes an expression to get run, then when we fetch the stop event at
the end of the expression evaluation, we call WillStop again on the
expression handling thread, which will do the same StackFrameRecognizer
work again. If anyone is locking along that path, you will end up with a
deadlock between the two threads.

The example that brought this to my attention was the
objc_exception_throw recognizer which can cause the objc runtime
introspection functions to get run, and those take a lock in
AppleObjCRuntimeV2::DynamicClassInfoExtractor::UpdateISAToDescriptorMap
along this path, so the second thread servicing the expression deadlocks
against the first thread waiting for the expression to complete.

It makes more sense to have the frame recognizers run on demand, either
when someone asks for the variables for the frame, or when someone does
GetSelectedFrame. The former already worked that way, the only reason
this was being done in WillStop was because the StackFrameRecognizers
can change the SelectedFrame, so you needed to run them before the
anyone requested the SelectedFrame.

This patch moves SelectMostRelevantFrame to StackFrameList, and runs it
when GetSelectedFrame is called for the first time on a given stop. If
you call SetSelectedFrame before GetSelectedFrame, then you should NOT
run the recognizer & change the frame out from under you. This patch
also makes that work. There were already tests for this behavior, and
for the feature that caused the hang, but the hang is racy, and it
doesn't trigger all the time, so I don't have a way to test that
explicitly.

One more detail: it's actually pretty easy to end up calling
GetSelectedFrame, for instance if you ask for the best ExecutionContext
from an ExecutionContextRef it will fill the StackFrame with the result
of GetSelectedFrame and that would still have the same problems if this
happens on the Private State Thread. So this patch also short-circuits
SelectMostRelevantFrame if run on the that thread. I can't think of any
reason the computations that go on on the Private State Thread would
actually want the SelectedFrame - that's a user-facing concept, so
avoiding that complication is the best way to go.

rdar://107643231

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D147753
2023-04-07 12:21:00 -07:00
Jim Ingham
f79c037b63 Fix the check in StopInfoBreakpoint for "are we currently running an expression"
We were checking "WasTheLastResumeForUserExpression" but that returns true even
if that expression was completed, provided we haven't run again.  This uses a
better check.

This is actually fairly hard to trigger.  It happens the first time you hit an
objc_exception_throw breakpoint and invoke that frame recognizer for that.  But
I couldn't trigger it using a Python based frame recognizer.  So I wrote a test
for the objc_exception_throw_breakpoint recognizer which should have been there
anyway...  It fails (the target auto-continues) w/o this patch and succeeds with
it.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D147587
2023-04-05 17:14:25 -07:00
Pavel Labath
af9e1fa178 [lldb] Detach the child process when stepping over a fork
Step over thread plans were claiming to explain the fork stop reasons,
which prevented the default fork logic (detaching from the child
process) from kicking in. This patch changes that.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141605
2023-04-05 13:25:43 +02:00
Alex Langford
41b6d5863f Revert "[lldb] Move UnixSignals creation into Platform plugins"
This reverts commit ee232506b8.
As discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D146668 we'll find another way
forward.
2023-03-27 13:42:14 -07:00
Alex Langford
64b3bbc522 [lldb] Remove NO_PLUGIN_DEPENDENCIES from lldbTarget
As discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D146668 I will be reverting
0c5cee7799 and ee232506b8.
I'm removing NO_PLUGIN_DEPENDENCIES from lldbTarget first so that these
reverts will not leave LLDB in a bad state afterwards.
2023-03-27 13:35:48 -07:00
Alex Langford
5499b026d2 [lldb][CMake] Enforce not linking against plugin libs in core libs
Non-plugin lldb libraries should generally not be linking against lldb
plugin libraries. Enforce this in CMake.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D146553
2023-03-21 16:24:36 -07:00
David Spickett
85bc498826 [LLDB] Show sub type of signals when debugging a core file
Previously we only looked at the si_signo field, so you got:
```
(lldb) bt
* thread #1, name = 'a.out.mte', stop reason = signal SIGSEGV
  * frame #0: 0x00000000004007f4
```
This patch adds si_code so we can show:
```
(lldb) bt
* thread #1, name = 'a.out.mte', stop reason = signal SIGSEGV: sync tag check fault
  * frame #0: 0x00000000004007f4
```

The order of errno and code was incorrect in ElfLinuxSigInfo::Parse.
It was the order that a "swapped" siginfo arch would use, which for Linux,
is only MIPS. We removed MIPS Linux support some time ago.

See:
fe15c26ee2/include/uapi/asm-generic/siginfo.h (L121)

A test is added using memory tagging faults. Which were the original
motivation for the changes.

Reviewed By: JDevlieghere

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D146045
2023-03-21 09:10:09 +00:00
Jim Ingham
2c7abc83f6 Reapply 8d024a79ea w/o the extra bits. 2023-03-20 16:11:00 -07:00
Jim Ingham
9b655c2627 Revert "Fix a problem with "watchpoint triggers before" watchpoint handling."
This reverts commit 8d024a79ea.

I accidentally included some "in progress" work that wasn't supposed to
go with this commit.
2023-03-20 16:05:57 -07:00
Alex Langford
ee232506b8 [lldb] Move UnixSignals creation into Platform plugins
The high level goal of this change is to remove lldbTarget's dependency
on lldbPluginProcessUtility. The reason for this existing dependency is
so that we can create the appropriate UnixSignals object based on an
ArchSpec. Instead of using the ArchSpec, we can instead take advantage
of the Platform associated with the current Target.

This is accomplished by adding a new method to Platform,
CreateUnixSignals, which will create the correct UnixSignals object for
us. We then can use `Platform::GetUnixSignals` and rely on that to give
us the correct signals as needed.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D146263
2023-03-20 15:41:06 -07:00
Jim Ingham
8d024a79ea Fix a problem with "watchpoint triggers before" watchpoint handling.
We need to step the watchpoint instruction in these cases, but the
when we queued the ThreadPlanStepOverWatchpoint to do this, we didn't
make it a Controlling plan.  So if you are stepping, this plan returns as
though it were a utility plan, and the stepping plan keeps going.

This only partially fixes the problem on Darwin; there's another bug
with reporting a watchpoint when we're instruction single stepping over
an instruction that triggers a watchpoint.  The kernel reports the
"single step completed" but not the watchpoint hit.  So this commit
also refactors the test into a part that works (at least on Darwin) and
a part that still fails.

We may have to adjust the test result expectations for other systems after
this fix.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D146337
2023-03-20 15:17:15 -07:00