Commit Graph

843 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Miro Bucko
0d4da0df16 [lldb][API] Add Find(Ranges)InMemory() to Process SB API (#96569)
This is a second attempt to land #95007

Test Plan:
llvm-lit
llvm-project/lldb/test/API/python_api/find_in_memory/TestFindInMemory.py
llvm-project/lldb/test/API/python_api/find_in_memory/TestFindRangesInMemory.py

Reviewers: clayborg

Tasks: lldb
2024-06-24 18:51:12 -04:00
Chelsea Cassanova
a32b7199f0 Revert commits that add TestFind(Ranges)InMemory.py (#96560)
Reverting to unblock macOS buildbots which are currently failing on
these tests.
https://green.lab.llvm.org/job/llvm.org/view/LLDB/job/as-lldb-cmake/6377/
2024-06-24 15:12:49 -07:00
Miro Bucko
10bd5ad0a1 [lldb][API] Add Find(Ranges)InMemory() to Process SB API (#95007)
Test Plan:
llvm-lit
llvm-project/lldb/test/API/python_api/find_in_memory/TestFindInMemory.py

llvm-project/lldb/test/API/python_api/find_in_memory/TestFindRangesInMemory.py

Reviewers: clayborg

Tasks: lldb
2024-06-24 11:06:20 -04:00
Jonas Devlieghere
fcee0333ba [lldb] Suppress unsupported language warning for assembly (#95871)
The following warning is technically correct, but pretty much useless,
since there aren't any frame variables that we'd expect the debugger to
understand.

> This version of LLDB has no plugin for the language "assembler".
> Inspection of frame variables will be limited.

This message is useful in the general case but should be suppressed for
the "assembler" case.

rdar://92745462
2024-06-18 08:51:40 -07:00
Miro Bucko
265589785c [nfc][lldb] Move FastSearch from CommandObjectMemoryFind to Process (#93688)
Moving CommandObjectMemoryFind::FastSearch() to Process::FindInMemory(). Plan to expose FindInMemory as public API in SBProcess.
2024-05-29 10:37:57 -07:00
Jacob Lalonde
47d80ec180 [LLDB/Coredump] Only take the Pthread from stack start to the stackpointer + red_zone (#92002)
Currently in Core dumps, the entire pthread is copied, including the
unused space beyond the stack pointer. This causes large amounts of core
dump inflation when the number of threads is high, but the stack usage
is low. Such as when an application is using a thread pool.

This change will optimize for these situations in addition to generally
improving the core dump performance for all of lldb.
2024-05-16 14:17:19 -07:00
GeorgeHuyubo
5bf653ca42 Revert "Read and store gnu build id from loaded core file" (#92181)
Reverts llvm/llvm-project#92078
2024-05-14 14:36:17 -07:00
GeorgeHuyubo
536abf827b Read and store gnu build id from loaded core file (#92078)
As we have debuginfod as symbol locator available in lldb now, we want
to make full use of it.
In case of post mortem debugging, we don't always have the main
executable available.
However, the .note.gnu.build-id of the main executable(some other
modules too), should be available in the core file, as those binaries
are loaded in memory and dumped in the core file.

We try to iterate through the NT_FILE entries, read and store the gnu
build id if possible. This will be very useful as this id is the unique
key which is needed for querying the debuginfod server.

Test:
Build and run lldb. Breakpoint set to
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/main/lldb/source/Plugins/SymbolLocator/Debuginfod/SymbolLocatorDebuginfod.cpp#L147
Verified after this commit, module_uuid is the correct gnu build id of
the main executable which caused the crash(first in the NT_FILE entry)
2024-05-14 14:35:35 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
528f5ba7af [lldb] Create a single Severity enum in lldb-enumerations (#90917)
We have 3 different enums all expressing severity (info, warning,
error). Remove all uses with a new Severity enum in lldb-enumerations.h.
2024-05-03 09:25:38 -07:00
Alex Langford
5779483527 [lldb][nfc] Move broadcaster class strings away from ConstString (#89690)
These are hardcoded strings that are already present in the data section
of the binary, no need to immediately place them in the ConstString
StringPools. Lots of code still calls `GetBroadcasterClass` and places
the return value into a ConstString. Changing that would be a good
follow-up.

Additionally, calls to these functions are still wrapped in ConstStrings
at the SBAPI layer. This is because we must guarantee the lifetime of
all strings handed out publicly.
2024-04-24 12:13:18 -07:00
Miro Bucko
92631a4824 [lldb][MinidumpFileBuilder] Fix addition of MemoryList steam (#88564)
Summary:
AddMemoryList() was returning the last error status returned by
ReadMemory(). So if an invalid memory region was read last, the function
would return an error.

Test Plan:
./bin/llvm-lit -sv
~/src/llvm-project/lldb/test/API/functionalities/process_save_core_minidump/TestProcessSaveCoreMinidump.py

Reviewers:
kevinfrei,clayborg 

Subscribers:

Tasks:

Tags:
2024-04-22 10:40:06 -07:00
Alex Langford
10b0e35537 [lldb] Invert relationship between Process and AddressableBits (#85858)
AddressableBits is in the Utility module of LLDB. It currently directly
refers to Process, which is from the Target LLDB module. This is a
layering violation which concretely means that it is impossible to link
anything that uses Utility without it also using Target as well. This is
generally not an issue for LLDB (since everything is built together) but
it may make it difficult to write unit tests for AddressableBits later
on.
2024-03-20 10:46:06 -07:00
Jason Molenda
aeaa11aeac [lldb] Address mask sbprocess apis and new mask invalid const (#83663)
[lldb] Add SBProcess methods for get/set/use address masks (#83095)

I'm reviving a patch from phabracator, https://reviews.llvm.org/D155905
which was approved but I wasn't thrilled with all the API I was adding
to SBProcess for all of the address mask types / memory regions. In this
update, I added enums to control type address mask type (code, data,
any) and address space specifiers (low, high, all) with defaulted
arguments for the most common case.  I originally landed this via
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/83095 but it failed on CIs
outside of arm64 Darwin so I had to debug it on more environments
and update the patch.

This patch is also fixing a bug in the "addressable bits to address
mask" calculation I added in AddressableBits::SetProcessMasks. If lldb
were told that 64 bits are valid for addressing, this method would
overflow the calculation and set an invalid mask. Added tests to check
this specific bug while I was adding these APIs.

This patch changes the value of "no mask set" from 0 to
LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS_MASK, which is UINT64_MAX. A mask of all 1's
means "no bits are used for addressing" which is an impossible mask,
whereas a mask of 0 means "all bits are used for addressing" which
is possible.

I added a base class implementation of ABI::FixCodeAddress and
ABI::FixDataAddress that will apply the Process mask values if they
are set to a value other than LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS_MASK.

I updated all the callers/users of the Mask methods which were
handling a value of 0 to mean invalid mask to use
LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS_MASK.

I added code to the all AArch64 ABI Fix* methods to apply the
Highmem masks if they have been set.  These will not be set on a
Linux environment, but in TestAddressMasks.py I test the highmem
masks feature for any AArch64 target, so all AArch64 ABI  plugins 
must handle it.

rdar://123530562
2024-03-06 10:06:56 -08:00
Jason Molenda
e8ce864a36 Revert "[lldb] Add SBProcess methods for get/set/use address masks (#83095)"
This reverts commit 9a12b0a600.

TestAddressMasks fails its first test on lldb-x86_64-debian,
lldb-arm-ubuntu, lldb-aarch64-ubuntu bots.  Reverting while
investigating.
2024-02-29 17:29:24 -08:00
Jason Molenda
9a12b0a600 [lldb] Add SBProcess methods for get/set/use address masks (#83095)
I'm reviving a patch from phabracator, https://reviews.llvm.org/D155905
which was approved but I wasn't thrilled with all the API I was adding
to SBProcess for all of the address mask types / memory regions. In this
update, I added enums to control type address mask type (code, data,
any) and address space specifiers (low, high, all) with defaulted
arguments for the most common case.

This patch is also fixing a bug in the "addressable bits to address
mask" calculation I added in AddressableBits::SetProcessMasks. If lldb
were told that 64 bits are valid for addressing, this method would
overflow the calculation and set an invalid mask. Added tests to check
this specific bug while I was adding these APIs.

rdar://123530562
2024-02-29 17:02:42 -08:00
Adrian Prantl
55bc0488af Improve and modernize logging for Process::CompleteAttach() (#82717)
Target::SetArchitecture() does not necessarily set the triple that is
being passed in, and will unconditionally log the real architecture to
the log channel. By flipping the order between the log outputs, the
resulting combined log makes a lot more sense to read.
2024-02-23 08:00:58 -08:00
Alex Langford
02d3a799e7 [lldb][NFCI] Remove EventData* parameter from BroadcastEventIfUnique (#79045)
Instead of passing the data to BroadcastEventIfUnique to create an Event
object on the behalf of the caller, the caller can create the Event
up-front.
2024-01-26 10:40:33 -08:00
Alex Langford
0cea54a382 [lldb][NFCI] Remove EventData* param from BroadcastEvent (#78773)
BroadcastEvent currently takes its EventData* param and shoves it into
an Event object, which takes ownership of the pointer and places it into
a shared_ptr to manage the lifetime.

Instead of relying on `new` and passing raw pointers around, I think it
would make more sense to create the shared_ptr up front.
2024-01-22 10:46:20 -08:00
Jason Molenda
54d8193639 Return high address masks correctly in Process (#78379)
In https://reviews.llvm.org/D151292 I added the ability to track address
masks separately for high and low memory addresses, a capability of
AArch64. I did my testing with manual address mask settings (via
target.process.highmem-virtual-addressable-bits) but didn't have a real
corefile that included this metadata and required it.

My intention is that when the high address mask isn't specified, by the
user (via the setting) or the Process plugin, we fall back to using the
low address mask. The low and high address mask is the same for almost
all environments.

But the patch I wrote never uses the Process plugin high address mask if
it was set, e.g. from corefile metadata. This patch corrects that.

I also have an old patch in Phabractor that was approved to add
FixAddress methods to SBProcess; I need to pick that patch up and finish
it (I wanted to add an enum to specify which mask is being requested
iirc), so I can do address masks tests in API tests.

rdar://120926000
2024-01-16 23:59:05 -08:00
jimingham
9d3aec5535 Fix a stall in running quit while a live process is running (#74687)
We need to generate events when finalizing, or we won't know that we
succeeded in stopping the process to detach/kill. Instead, we stall and
then after our 20 interrupt timeout, we kill the process (even if we
were supposed to detach) and exit.

OTOH, we have to not generate events when the Process is being
destructed because shared_from_this has already been torn down, and
using it will cause crashes.
2023-12-07 14:36:27 -08:00
Jason Molenda
c73a3f16f8 [lldb] [mostly NFC] Large WP foundation: WatchpointResources (#68845)
This patch is rearranging code a bit to add WatchpointResources to
Process. A WatchpointResource is meant to represent a hardware
watchpoint register in the inferior process. It has an address, a size,
a type, and a list of Watchpoints that are using this
WatchpointResource.

This current patch doesn't add any of the features of
WatchpointResources that make them interesting -- a user asking to watch
a 24 byte object could watch this with three 8 byte WatchpointResources.
Or a Watchpoint on 1 byte at 0x1002 and a second watchpoint on 1 byte at
0x1003, these must both be served by a single WatchpointResource on that
doubleword at 0x1000 on a 64-bit target, if two hardware watchpoint
registers were used to track these separately, one of them may not be
hit. Or if you have one Watchpoint on a variable with a condition set,
and another Watchpoint on that same variable with a command defined or
different condition, or ignorecount, both of those Watchpoints need to
evaluate their criteria/commands when their WatchpointResource has been
hit.

There's a bit of code movement to rearrange things in the direction I'll
need for implementing this feature, so I want to start with reviewing &
landing this mostly NFC patch and we can focus on the algorithmic
choices about how WatchpointResources are shared and handled as they're
triggeed, separately.

This patch also stops printing "Watchpoint <n> hit: old value: <x>, new
vlaue: <y>" for Read watchpoints. I could make an argument for print
"Watchpoint <n> hit: current value <x>" but the current output doesn't
make any sense, and the user can print the value if they are
particularly interested. Read watchpoints are used primarily to
understand what code is reading a variable.

This patch adds more fallbacks for how to print the objects being
watched if we have types, instead of assuming they are all integral
values, so a struct will print its elements. As large watchpoints are
added, we'll be doing a lot more of those.

To track the WatchpointSP in the WatchpointResources, I changed the
internal API which took a WatchpointSP and devolved it to a Watchpoint*,
which meant touching several different Process files. I removed the
watchpoint code in ProcessKDP which only reported that watchpoints
aren't supported, the base class does that already.

I haven't yet changed how we receive a watchpoint to identify the
WatchpointResource responsible for the trigger, and identify all
Watchpoints that are using this Resource to evaluate their conditions
etc. This is the same work that a BreakpointSite needs to do when it has
been tiggered, where multiple Breakpoints may be at the same address.

There is not yet any printing of the Resources that a Watchpoint is
implemented in terms of ("watchpoint list", or
SBWatchpoint::GetDescription).

"watchpoint set var" and "watchpoint set expression" take a size
argument which was previously 1, 2, 4, or 8 (an enum). I've changed this
to an unsigned int. Most hardware implementations can only watch 1, 2,
4, 8 byte ranges, but with Resources we'll allow a user to ask for
different sized watchpoints and set them in hardware-expressble terms
soon.

I've annotated areas where I know there is work still needed with
LWP_TODO that I'll be working on once this is landed.

I've tested this on aarch64 macOS, aarch64 Linux, and Intel macOS.

https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-large-watchpoint-support-in-lldb/72116
(cherry picked from commit fc6b72523f)
2023-11-30 14:59:10 -08:00
jimingham
d1bf1947e4 Send an explicit interrupt to cancel an attach waitfor. (#72565)
Currently when you interrupt a:

(lldb) process attach -w -n some_process

lldb just closes the connection to the stub and kills the
lldb_private::Process it made for the attach. The stub at the other end
notices the connection go down and exits because of that. But when
communication to a device is handled through some kind of proxy server
which isn't as well behaved as one would wish, that signal might not be
reliable, causing debugserver to persist on the machine, waiting to
steal the next instance of that process.

We can work around those failures by sending an explicit interrupt
before closing down the connection. The stub will also have to be
waiting for the interrupt for this to make any difference. I changed
debugserver to do that.

I didn't make the equivalent change in lldb-server. So long as you
aren't faced with a flakey connection, this should not be necessary.
2023-11-30 09:48:04 -08:00
David Spickett
b0af8a1ede Revert "[lldb] [mostly NFC] Large WP foundation: WatchpointResources (#68845)"
...and follow ups.

As it has caused test failures on Linux Arm and AArch64:
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/96/builds/49126
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/17/builds/45824

```
  lldb-shell :: Subprocess/clone-follow-child-wp.test
  lldb-shell :: Subprocess/fork-follow-child-wp.test
  lldb-shell :: Subprocess/vfork-follow-child-wp.test
```

This reverts commit a6c62bf1a4,
commit a0a1ff3ab4 and commit
fc6b72523f.
2023-11-28 09:39:37 +00:00
Jason Molenda
fc6b72523f [lldb] [mostly NFC] Large WP foundation: WatchpointResources (#68845)
This patch is rearranging code a bit to add WatchpointResources to
Process. A WatchpointResource is meant to represent a hardware
watchpoint register in the inferior process. It has an address, a size,
a type, and a list of Watchpoints that are using this
WatchpointResource.

This current patch doesn't add any of the features of
WatchpointResources that make them interesting -- a user asking to watch
a 24 byte object could watch this with three 8 byte WatchpointResources.
Or a Watchpoint on 1 byte at 0x1002 and a second watchpoint on 1 byte at
0x1003, these must both be served by a single WatchpointResource on that
doubleword at 0x1000 on a 64-bit target, if two hardware watchpoint
registers were used to track these separately, one of them may not be
hit. Or if you have one Watchpoint on a variable with a condition set,
and another Watchpoint on that same variable with a command defined or
different condition, or ignorecount, both of those Watchpoints need to
evaluate their criteria/commands when their WatchpointResource has been
hit.

There's a bit of code movement to rearrange things in the direction I'll
need for implementing this feature, so I want to start with reviewing &
landing this mostly NFC patch and we can focus on the algorithmic
choices about how WatchpointResources are shared and handled as they're
triggeed, separately.

This patch also stops printing "Watchpoint <n> hit: old value: <x>, new
vlaue: <y>" for Read watchpoints. I could make an argument for print
"Watchpoint <n> hit: current value <x>" but the current output doesn't
make any sense, and the user can print the value if they are
particularly interested. Read watchpoints are used primarily to
understand what code is reading a variable.

This patch adds more fallbacks for how to print the objects being
watched if we have types, instead of assuming they are all integral
values, so a struct will print its elements. As large watchpoints are
added, we'll be doing a lot more of those.

To track the WatchpointSP in the WatchpointResources, I changed the
internal API which took a WatchpointSP and devolved it to a Watchpoint*,
which meant touching several different Process files. I removed the
watchpoint code in ProcessKDP which only reported that watchpoints
aren't supported, the base class does that already.

I haven't yet changed how we receive a watchpoint to identify the
WatchpointResource responsible for the trigger, and identify all
Watchpoints that are using this Resource to evaluate their conditions
etc. This is the same work that a BreakpointSite needs to do when it has
been tiggered, where multiple Breakpoints may be at the same address.

There is not yet any printing of the Resources that a Watchpoint is
implemented in terms of ("watchpoint list", or
SBWatchpoint::GetDescription).

"watchpoint set var" and "watchpoint set expression" take a size
argument which was previously 1, 2, 4, or 8 (an enum). I've changed this
to an unsigned int. Most hardware implementations can only watch 1, 2,
4, 8 byte ranges, but with Resources we'll allow a user to ask for
different sized watchpoints and set them in hardware-expressble terms
soon.

I've annotated areas where I know there is work still needed with
LWP_TODO that I'll be working on once this is landed.

I've tested this on aarch64 macOS, aarch64 Linux, and Intel macOS.

https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-large-watchpoint-support-in-lldb/72116
2023-11-27 13:28:59 -08:00
Greg Clayton
215bacb5dc Centralize the code that figures out which memory ranges to save into core files (#71772)
Prior to this patch, each core file plugin (ObjectFileMachO.cpp and
ObjectFileMinindump.cpp) would calculate the address ranges to save in
different ways. This patch adds a new function to Process.h/.cpp:

```
Status Process::CalculateCoreFileSaveRanges(lldb::SaveCoreStyle core_style, CoreFileMemoryRanges &ranges);
```

The patch updates the ObjectFileMachO::SaveCore(...) and
ObjectFileMinindump::SaveCore(...) to use same code. This will allow
core files to be consistent with the lldb::SaveCoreStyle across
different core file creators and will allow us to add new core file
saving features that do more complex things in future patches.
2023-11-11 11:21:32 -08:00
Med Ismail Bennani
455098d807 Revert "[lldb/Target] Delay image loading after corefile process creation (#70351)"
This reverts commit 3c727a959d because it
introduced some test failures:

https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/68/builds/62638

```
********************
Failed Tests (5):
  lldb-api :: functionalities/postmortem/elf-core/TestLinuxCore.py
  lldb-api :: functionalities/postmortem/mach-core/TestMachCore.py
  lldb-api :: functionalities/postmortem/netbsd-core/TestNetBSDCore.py
  lldb-api :: functionalities/unwind/noreturn/module-end/TestNoReturnModuleEnd.py
  lldb-api :: tools/lldb-dap/coreFile/TestDAP_coreFile.py
```

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <ismail@bennani.ma>
2023-10-31 20:35:25 -07:00
Med Ismail Bennani
3c727a959d [lldb/Target] Delay image loading after corefile process creation (#70351) 2023-10-31 19:56:02 -07:00
David Spickett
1446e3cf76 Revert "Fix a bug with cancelling "attach -w" after you have run a process previously (#65822)"
This reverts commit 7265f792dc.

The new test case is flaky on Linux AArch64 (https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/96)
and more flaky on Windows on Arm (https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/219/builds/5735).
2023-09-20 08:19:53 +00:00
jimingham
7265f792dc Fix a bug with cancelling "attach -w" after you have run a process previously (#65822)
The problem is that the when the "attach" command is initiated, the
ExecutionContext for the command has a process - it's the exited one
from the previour run. But the `attach wait` creates a new process for
the attach, and then errors out instead of interrupting when it finds
that its process and the one in the command's ExecutionContext don't
match.

This change checks that if we're returning a target from
GetExecutionContext, we fill the context with it's current process, not
some historical one.
2023-09-19 11:25:53 -07:00
David Spickett
3125bd4bc7 [lldb] Correctly invalidate unloaded image tokens (#65945)
Some functions in Process were using LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS instead of
LLDB_INVALID_TOKEN.

The only visible effect of this appears to be that "process unload
<tab>" would complete to 0 even after the image was unloaded. Since the
command is checking for LLDB_INVALID_TOKEN.

Everything else worked somehow. I've added a check to the existing load
unload tests anyway.

The tab completion cannot be checked as is, but when I make them more
strict in a later patch it will be tested.
2023-09-11 17:12:09 +01:00
Pavel Labath
d4c3c2872f [lldb] Fix Process::SyncIOHandler
D157648 broke the function because it put the blocking wait into a
critical section. This meant that, if m_iohandler_sync was not updated
before entering the function, no amount of waiting would help.

Fix that by restriciting the scope of the critical section to the
iohandler check.
2023-09-08 10:17:16 +02:00
Alex Langford
14d95b26ae [lldb][NFCI] Remove unneeded ConstString conversions
ConstString can be implicitly converted into a llvm::StringRef. This is
very useful in many places, but it also hides places where we are
creating a ConstString only to use it as a StringRef for the entire
lifespan of the ConstString object.

I locally removed the implicit conversion and found some of the places we
were doing this.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D159237
2023-08-31 11:27:59 -07:00
Augusto Noronha
fef609d2d1 Revert "[lldb] Fix data race in ThreadList"
This reverts commit bb90063249.
2023-08-22 11:14:04 -07:00
Alex Langford
58fe7b751d [lldb] Change UnixSignals::GetSignalAsCString to GetSignalAsStringRef
This is in preparation to remove the uses of ConstString from
UnixSignals.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D158209
2023-08-21 12:44:17 -07:00
Augusto Noronha
79a8e006db [lldb] Fix data race in Process
Thread sanitizer reports a data race in Process.cpp in the usage of
m_process_input_reader. Fix this data race by introducing a mutex
guarding the access to this variable.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D157648
2023-08-18 16:55:37 -07:00
Augusto Noronha
bb90063249 [lldb] Fix data race in ThreadList
ThreadSanitizer reports the following issue:

```
  Write of size 8 at 0x00010a70abb0 by thread T3 (mutexes: write M0):
    #0 lldb_private::ThreadList::Update(lldb_private::ThreadList&) ThreadList.cpp:741 (liblldb.18.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x5dedf4) (BuildId: 9bced2aafa373580ae9d750d9cf79a8f32000000200000000100000000000e00)
    #1 lldb_private::Process::UpdateThreadListIfNeeded() Process.cpp:1212 (liblldb.18.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x53bbec) (BuildId: 9bced2aafa373580ae9d750d9cf79a8f32000000200000000100000000000e00)

  Previous read of size 8 at 0x00010a70abb0 by main thread (mutexes: write M1):
    #0 lldb_private::ThreadList::GetMutex() const ThreadList.cpp:785 (liblldb.18.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x5df138) (BuildId: 9bced2aafa373580ae9d750d9cf79a8f32000000200000000100000000000e00)
    #1 lldb_private::ThreadList::DidResume() ThreadList.cpp:656 (liblldb.18.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x5de5c0) (BuildId: 9bced2aafa373580ae9d750d9cf79a8f32000000200000000100000000000e00)
    #2 lldb_private::Process::PrivateResume() Process.cpp:3130 (liblldb.18.0.0git.dylib:arm64+0x53cd7c) (BuildId: 9bced2aafa373580ae9d750d9cf79a8f32000000200000000100000000000e00)
```

Fix this by only using the mutex in ThreadList and removing the one in
process entirely.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D158034
2023-08-18 16:53:26 -07:00
Jim Ingham
2e7aa2ee34 Replace the singleton "ShadowListener" with a primary and N secondary Listeners
Before the addition of the process "Shadow Listener" you could only have one
Listener observing the Process Broadcaster.  That was necessary because fetching the
Process event is what switches the public process state, and for the execution
control logic to be manageable you needed to keep other listeners from causing
this to happen before the main process control engine was ready.

Ismail added the notion of a "ShadowListener" - which allowed you ONE
extra process listener.  This patch inverts that setup by designating the
first listener as primary - and giving it priority in fetching events.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D157556
2023-08-16 10:35:32 -07:00
Alex Langford
5a25f97e69 [lldb][NFCI] Change parameter type in Process::SetExitStatus
My primary motivation here is actually to change something in
UnixSignals, but this change is a necesary precondition.

I've also updated the documentation and rewritten the log statements to
use `formatv` instead of `printf` (printf-style formatting and
llvm::StringRef don't mix well).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D157662
2023-08-14 15:49:03 -07:00
Alex Langford
f2d32ddcec [lldb] Sink StreamFile into lldbHost
StreamFile subclasses Stream (from lldbUtility) and is backed by a File
(from lldbHost). It does not depend on anything from lldbCore or any of its
sibling libraries, so I think it makes sense for this to live in
lldbHost instead.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D157460
2023-08-09 17:17:18 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
520681e56d [lldb] Fix incorrect uses of formatv specifiers in LLDB_LOG
Fix incorrect uses of formatv specifiers in LLDB_LOG. Unlike Python,
arguments must be numbered. All the affected log statements take
llvm:Errors so use the LLDB_LOG_ERROR macro instead.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D154532
2023-07-05 11:27:52 -07:00
Med Ismail Bennani
9987646057 [lldb] Fix data race when interacting with python scripts
This patch should fix some data races when a python script (i.e. a
Scripted Process) has a nested call to another python script (i.e. a
OperatingSystem Plugin), which can cause concurrent writes to the python
lock count.

This patch also fixes a data race happening when resetting the operating
system unique pointer.

To address these issues, both accesses is guarded by a mutex.

rdar://109413039

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D154271

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <ismail@bennani.ma>
2023-07-03 11:49:11 -07:00
Alex Langford
9442e81f02 [lldb][NFCI] Remove ConstString from Process::ConfigureStructuredData
This is a follow-up to b4827a3c0a.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D153675
2023-06-26 11:09:09 -07:00
Alex Langford
2014572d9a [lldb][NFCI] Remove unneeded ConstString constructions for OptionValueProperties::AppendProperty
I removed ConstString from OptionValueProperties in 643ba926c1, but
there are a few call sites that still create a ConstString as an
argument. I did not catch these initially because ConstString has an
implicit conversion method to StringRef.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D153673
2023-06-26 11:06:29 -07:00
Alex Langford
1a397ecffd [lldb][NFCI] Remove use of ConstString from StructuredDataPlugin
The use of ConstString in StructuredDataPlugin is unneccessary as fast
comparisons are not neeeded for StructuredDataPlugins.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D153482
2023-06-23 10:29:52 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
f1bb534b0a [lldb] Simplify logging in Process settings (NFC) 2023-06-16 14:46:46 -07:00
Jason Molenda
538df1d8a2 lldb [NFC] Add logging to Process when address masks are updated
To aid in integration testing/debugging. Verifying that the address
mask/addressable bits values from different sources are correctly
registered by lldb.
2023-06-15 17:38:45 -07:00
Jason Molenda
90d9f88f19 Add Fix*Address methods to Process, call into ABI
We need to clear non-addressable bits from addresses across
the lldb sources.  Currently these need to use an ABI method
to clear those bits from addresses, which you do by taking a
Process, getting the current ABI, then calling the method.

Simplify this by providing methods in Process which call into
the ABI methods themselves.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D152863
2023-06-14 13:49:26 -07:00
Alex Langford
59af0c3895 [lldb][NFCI] Change the way Process stores StructuredData plugins
Instead of having a map from ConstString to StructuredDataPluginSP, we
can use an llvm::StringMap. The keys themselves don't need to be
ConstStrings, so an llvm::StringMap feels most natural.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D151960
2023-06-05 13:49:58 -07:00
Alex Langford
0871f22edc [lldb][NFCI] Use size_t in OptionValueProperties
In many places we're using uint32_t where we should be using size_t.
We should be consistent.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D151949
2023-06-05 12:57:43 -07:00
Med Ismail Bennani
032d91cb2f [lldb/crashlog] Create interactive crashlog with no binary
This patch changes the way we load a crash report into a scripted
process by creating a empty target.

To do so, it parses the architecture information from the report (for
both the legacy and json format) and uses that to create a target that
doesn't have any executable, like what we do when attaching to a process.

For the legacy format, we mostly rely on the `Code Type` line, since the
architure is an optional field on the `Binary Images` sections.

However for the json format, we first try to get the architecture while
parsing the image dictionary if we couldn't find it, we try to infer it
using the "flavor" key when parsing the frame's registers.

If the architecture is still not set after parsing the report, we raise
an exception.

rdar://107850263

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D151849

Differential

Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <ismail@bennani.ma>
2023-06-01 17:10:57 -07:00