Fixes broken support for: `target.module[re.compile("libFoo")]`
There were two issues:
1. The type check was expecting `re.SRE_Pattern`
2. The expression to search the module path had a typo
In the first case, `re.SRE_Pattern` does not exist in Python 3, and is replaced
with `re.Pattern`.
While editing this code, I changed the type checks to us `isinstance`, which is
the conventional way of type checking.
From the docs on `type()`:
> The `isinstance()` built-in function is recommended for testing the type of an object, because it takes subclasses into account.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133130
Change the behavior of the libc++ `unordered_map` synthetic provider to present
children as `std::pair` values, just like `std::map` does.
The synthetic provider for libc++ `std::unordered_map` has returned children
that expose a level of internal structure (over top of the key/value pair). For
example, given an unordered map initialized with `{{1,2}, {3, 4}}`, the output
is:
```
(std::unordered_map<int, int, std::hash<int>, std::equal_to<int>, std::allocator<std::pair<const int, int> > >) map = size=2 {
[0] = {
__cc = (first = 3, second = 4)
}
[1] = {
__cc = (first = 1, second = 2)
}
}
```
It's not ideal/necessary to have the numbered children embdedded in the `__cc`
field.
Note: the numbered children have type
`std::__hash_node<std::__hash_value_type<Key, T>, void *>::__node_value_type`,
and the `__cc` fields have type `std::__hash_value_type<Key, T>::value_type`.
Compare this output to `std::map`:
```
(std::map<int, int, std::less<int>, std::allocator<std::pair<const int, int> > >) map = size=2 {
[0] = (first = 1, second = 2)
[1] = (first = 3, second = 4)
```
Where the numbered children have type `std::pair<const Key, T>`.
This changes the behavior of the synthetic provider for `unordered_map` to also
present children as `pairs`, just like `std::map`.
It appears the synthetic provider implementation for `unordered_map` was meant
to provide this behavior, but was maybe incomplete (see
d22a94377f). It has both an `m_node_type` and an
`m_element_type`, but uses only the former. The latter is exactly the type
needed for the children pairs. With this existing code, it's not much of a
change to make this work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117383
arm64e platforms.
On arm64e-capable Apple platforms, the system libraries are always
arm64e, but applications often are arm64. When a target is created
from file, LLDB recognizes it as an arm64 target, but debugserver will
still (technically correct) report the process as being arm64e. For
consistency, set the target to arm64 here.
rdar://92248684
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133069
When running LLDB API tests, a user can override test arguments with
LLDB_TEST_USER_ARGS. However, these flags used to be concatenated with a
CMake-derived variable LLDB_TEST_COMMON_ARGS, as below:
```
set(LLDB_DOTEST_ARGS ${LLDB_TEST_COMMON_ARGS};${LLDB_TEST_USER_ARGS}
CACHE INTERNAL STRING)
```
This is problematic, because LLDB_TEST_COMMON_ARGS must be processed
first, while LLDB_TEST_USER_ARGS args must be processed last, so that
user overrides are respected. Currently, if a user attempts to override
one of the "inferred" flags, the user's request is ignored. This is the
case, for example, with `--libcxx-include-dir` and
`--libcxx-library-dir`. Both flags are needed by the greendragon bots.
This commit removes the concatenation above, keeping the two original
variables throughout the entire flow, processing the user's flag last.
The variable LLDB_TEST_COMMON_ARGS needs to be a CACHE property, but it
is modified throughout the CMake file with `set` or `list` or `string`
commands, which don't work with properties. As such, a temporary
variable `LLDB_TEST_COMMON_ARGS_VAR` is created.
This was tested locally by invoking CMake with:
-DLLDB_TEST_USER_ARGS="--libcxx-include-dir=blah --libcxx-library-dir=blah2"
and checking that tests failed appropriately.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132642
When fission is enabled, we were indexing the skeleton CU _and_ the .dwo CU. Issues arise when users enable compiler options that add extra data to the skeleton CU (like -fsplit-dwarf-inlining) and there can end up being types in the skeleton CU due to template parameters. We never want to index this information since the .dwo file has the real definition, and we really don't want function prototypes from this info since all parameters are removed. The index doesn't work correctly if it does index the skeleton CU as the DIE offset will assume it is from the .dwo file, so even if we do index the skeleton CU, the index entries will try and grab information from the .dwo file using the wrong DIE offset which can cause errors to be displayed or even worse, if the DIE offsets is valid in the .dwo CU, the wrong DIE will be used.
We also fix DWO ID detection to use llvm::Optional<uint64_t> to make sure we can load a .dwo file with a DWO ID of zero.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131437
This test simply checks whether we can print an optimized
function argument. With recent changes to Clang the assumption
that we don't generate a `DW_AT_location` attribute for the
unused funciton parameter breaks.
This patch tries harder to get Clang to drop the location
from DWARF by making it generate an `undef` for `unused1`.
Drop the check for `unused2` since it adds no benefit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132635
This patch adds a formatter for `std::coroutine_handle`, both for libc++
and libstdc++. For the type-erased `coroutine_handle<>`, it shows the
`resume` and `destroy` function pointers. For a non-type-erased
`coroutine_handle<promise_type>` it also shows the `promise` value.
With this change, executing the `v t` command on the example from
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/DebuggingCoroutines.html now outputs
```
(task) t = {
handle = coro frame = 0x55555555b2a0 {
resume = 0x0000555555555a10 (a.out`coro_task(int, int) at llvm-example.cpp:36)
destroy = 0x0000555555556090 (a.out`coro_task(int, int) at llvm-example.cpp:36)
}
}
```
instead of just
```
(task) t = {
handle = {
__handle_ = 0x55555555b2a0
}
}
```
Note, how the symbols for the `resume` and `destroy` function pointer
reveal which coroutine is stored inside the `std::coroutine_handle`.
A follow-up commit will use this fact to infer the coroutine's promise
type and the representation of its internal coroutine state based on
the `resume` and `destroy` pointers.
The same formatter is used for both libc++ and libstdc++. It would
also work for MSVC's standard library, however it is not registered
for MSVC, given that lldb does not provide pretty printers for other
MSVC types, either.
The formatter is in a newly added `Coroutines.{h,cpp}` file because there
does not seem to be an already existing place where we could share
formatters across libc++ and libstdc++. Also, I expect this code to grow
as we improve debugging experience for coroutines further.
**Testing**
* Added API test
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132415
A simple sed doing these substitutions:
- `${LLVM_BINARY_DIR}/(\$\{CMAKE_CFG_INTDIR}/)?lib(${LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX})?\>` -> `${LLVM_LIBRARY_DIR}`
- `${LLVM_BINARY_DIR}/(\$\{CMAKE_CFG_INTDIR}/)?bin\>` -> `${LLVM_TOOLS_BINARY_DIR}`
where `\>` means "word boundary".
The only manual modifications were reverting changes in
- `compiler-rt/cmake/Modules/CompilerRTUtils.cmake
- `runtimes/CMakeLists.txt`
because these were "entry points" where we wanted to tread carefully not not introduce a "loop" which would end with an undefined variable being expanded to nothing.
This hopefully increases readability overall, and also decreases the usages of `LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX`, preparing us for D130586.
Reviewed By: sebastian-ne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132316
Remove the test override of `target.prefer-dynamic-value`.
Previously, the lldb default was `no-dynamic-values`. In rG9aa7e8e9ffbe (in
2015), the default was changed to `no-run-target`, but at that time the tests
were changed to be run with `no-dynamic-value`. I don't know the reasons for
not changing the tests, perhaps to avoid determining which tests to change, and
what about them to change.
Because `no-run-target` is the lldb default, I think it makes sense to make it
the test default too. It puts the test config closer to what's used in
practice.
This change removes the `target.prefer-dynamic-value` override, and for those
tests that failed, they have been updated to explicitly use
`no-dynamic-values`. Future changes could update these tests to use dynamic
values too, or they can be left as is to exercise non-dynamic typing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132382
This allows users to see similar output to what the "register read" command emits in LLDB's command line.
Added a test to verify that the PC has the correct value with contains a pointer followed by the module + function name and the source line info. Something like:
0x0000000100000a64 a.out`main + 132 at main.cpp:17:11
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129528
Symbols that have the section index of SHN_ABS were previously creating extra top level sections that contained the value of the symbol as if the symbol's value was an address. As far as I can tell, these symbol's values are not addresses, even if they do have a size. To make matters worse, adding these extra sections can stop address lookups from succeeding if the symbol's value + size overlaps with an existing section as these sections get mapped into memory when the image is loaded by the dynamic loader. This can cause stack frames to appear empty as the address lookup fails completely.
This patch:
- doesn't create a section for any SHN_ABS symbols
- makes symbols that are absolute have values that are not addresses
- add accessors to SBSymbol to get the value and size of a symbol as raw integers. Prevoiusly there was no way to access a symbol's value from a SBSymbol because the only accessors were:
SBAddress SBSymbol::GetStartAddress();
SBAddress SBSymbol::GetEndAddress();
and these accessors would return an invalid SBAddress if the symbol's value wasn't an address
- Adds a test to ensure no ".absolute.<symbol-name>" sections are created
- Adds a test to test the new SBSymbol APIs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131705
This check was put in place to prevent static functions
from translation units outside the one that the current
expression is evaluated from taking precedence over functions
in the global namespace. However, this is really a different
bug. LLDB lumps functions from all CUs into a single AST and
ends up picking the file-static even when C++ context rules
wouldn't allow that to happen.
This patch removes the check so we apply the AsmLabel to all
FunctionDecls we create from DWARF if we have a linkage name
available. This makes the code-path easier to reason about and
allows calling static functions in contexts where we previously
would've chosen the wrong function.
We also flip the XFAILs in the API test to reflect what effect
this change has.
**Testing**
* Fixed API tests and added XFAIL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132231
This will be useful in preparation for some reshuffling
of assertions in this file since we won't have to
adjust the persitent variable names during the process.
sed commands:
```
s/expect("expr -- /expect_expr("/g
s/startstr="(int) [$0-9]* = /result_type="int", result_value="/g
```
**Testing**
* API tests still pass
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132271
Try to always send vCont packets and include the PID in them if running
multiprocess. This is necessary to ensure that with the upcoming full
multiprocess support always resumes the correct process without having
to resort to the legacy Hc packets.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131758
This patch combines D129166 (to always pick the just-built libc++) and
D132257 (to allow customizing the libc++ for testing). The common goal
is to avoid picking up an unexpected libc++ for testing.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132263
Try to always send vCont packets and include the PID in them if running
multiprocess. This is necessary to ensure that with the upcoming full
multiprocess support always resumes the correct process without having
to resort to the legacy Hc packets.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131758
This commit adds tests to ensure that queue-specific breakpoints
work as expected, as this feature wasn't being tested before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131605
This test fails for Clang versions < 14.0 for `dsym` variants.
`dsymutil` strips debug info for classes with only static members.
Thus move the failing assertions into the XFAIL test case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132004
When resolving symbols during IR execution, lldb makes a last effort attempt
to resolve external symbols from object files by approximate name matching.
It currently uses `CPlusPlusNameParser` to parse the demangled function name
and arguments for the unresolved symbol and its candidates. However, this
hand-rolled C++ parser doesn’t support ABI tags which, depending on the demangler,
get demangled into `[abi:tag]`. This lack of parsing support causes lldb to never
consider a candidate mangled function name that has ABI tags.
The issue reproduces by calling an ABI-tagged template function from the
expression evaluator. This is particularly problematic with the recent
addition of ABI tags to numerous libcxx APIs.
The issue stems from the fact that `clang::CodeGen` emits function
function calls using the mangled name inferred from the `FunctionDecl`
LLDB constructs from DWARF. Debug info often lacks information for
us to construct a perfect FunctionDecl resulting in subtle mangled
name inaccuracies.
This patch side-steps the problem of inaccurate `FunctionDecl`s by
attaching an `asm()` label to each `FunctionDecl` LLDB creates from DWARF.
`clang::CodeGen` consults this label to get the mangled name as one of
the first courses of action when emitting a function call.
LLDB already does this for C++ member functions as of
[675767a591](https://reviews.llvm.org/D40283)
**Testing**
* Added API tests
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131974
Patch sets ARM cpu, before compiling JIT code. This enables FastISel for armv6 and higher CPUs and allows using hardware FPU
~~~
OS Laboratory. Huawei RRI. Saint-Petersburg
Reviewed By: DavidSpickett
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131783
When looking at template arguments in LLDB, we usually care about what
the user passed in his code, not whether some of those arguments where
passed as a variadic parameter pack.
This patch extends all the C++ APIs to look at template parameters to
take an additional 'expand_pack' boolean that automatically unwraps the
potential argument packs. The equivalent SBAPI calls have been changed
to pass true for this parameter.
A byproduct of the patch is to also fix the support for template type
that have only a parameter pack as argument (like the OnlyPack type in
the test). Those were not recognized as template instanciations before.
The added test verifies that the SBAPI is able to iterate over the
arguments of a variadic template.
The original patch was written by Fred Riss almost 4 years ago.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51387
The per-PSB packet decoding logic was wrong because it was assuming that pt_insn_get_sync_offset was being udpated after every PSB. Silly me, that is not true. It returns the offset of the PSB packet after invoking pt_insn_sync_forward regardless of how many PSBs are visited later. Instead, I'm now following the approach described in https://github.com/intel/libipt/blob/master/doc/howto_libipt.md#parallel-decode for parallel decoding, which is basically what we need.
A nasty error that happened because of this is that when we had two PSBs (A and B), the following was happening
1. PSB A was processed all the way up to the end of the trace, which includes PSB B.
2. PSB B was then processed until the end of the trace.
The instructions emitted by step 2. were also emitted as part of step 1. so our trace had duplicated chunks. This problem becomes worse when you many PSBs.
As part of making sure this diff is correct, I added some other features that are very useful.
- Added a "synchronization point" event to the TraceCursor, so we can inspect when PSBs are emitted.
- Removed the single-thread decoder. Now the per-cpu decoder and single-thread decoder use the same code paths.
- Use the query decoder to fetch PSBs and timestamps. It turns out that the pt_insn_sync_forward of the instruction decoder can move past several PSBs (this means that we could skip some TSCs). On the other hand, the pt_query_sync_forward method doesn't skip PSBs, so we can get more accurate sync events and timing information.
- Turned LibiptDecoder into PSBBlockDecoder, which decodes single PSB blocks. It is the fundamental processing unit for decoding.
- Added many comments, asserts and improved error handling for clarity.
- Improved DecodeSystemWideTraceForThread so that a TSC is emitted always before a cpu change event. This was a bug that was annoying me before.
- SplitTraceInContinuousExecutions and FindLowestTSCInTrace are now using the query decoder, which can identify precisely each PSB along with their TSCs.
- Added an "only-events" option to the trace dumper to inspect only events.
I did extensive testing and I think we should have an in-house testing CI. The LLVM buildbots are not capable of supporting testing post-mortem traces of hundreds of megabytes. I'll leave that for later, but at least for now the current tests were able to catch most of the issues I encountered when doing this task.
A sample output of a program that I was single stepping is the following. You can see that only one PSB is emitted even though stepping happened!
```
thread #1: tid = 3578223
0: (event) trace synchronization point [offset = 0x0xef0]
a.out`main + 20 at main.cpp:29:20
1: 0x0000000000402479 leaq -0x1210(%rbp), %rax
2: (event) software disabled tracing
3: 0x0000000000402480 movq %rax, %rdi
4: (event) software disabled tracing
5: (event) software disabled tracing
6: 0x0000000000402483 callq 0x403bd4 ; std::vector<int, std::allocator<int>>::vector at stl_vector.h:391:7
7: (event) software disabled tracing
a.out`std::vector<int, std::allocator<int>>::vector() at stl_vector.h:391:7
8: 0x0000000000403bd4 pushq %rbp
9: (event) software disabled tracing
10: 0x0000000000403bd5 movq %rsp, %rbp
11: (event) software disabled tracing
```
This is another trace of a long program with a few PSBs.
```
(lldb) thread trace dump instructions -E -f thread #1: tid = 3603082
0: (event) trace synchronization point [offset = 0x0x80]
47417: (event) software disabled tracing
129231: (event) trace synchronization point [offset = 0x0x800]
146747: (event) software disabled tracing
246076: (event) software disabled tracing
259068: (event) trace synchronization point [offset = 0x0xf78]
259276: (event) software disabled tracing
259278: (event) software disabled tracing
no more data
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131630
When targeting macOS Ventura, ld64 will use authenticated fixups for
x86_64 as well as arm64 (where that has always been the case). This
results in test failures when using an Xcode 14 toolchain on an Intel
mac running macOS Ventura:
Failed Tests (3):
lldb-api :: commands/target/basic/TestTargetCommand.py
lldb-api :: lang/c/global_variables/TestGlobalVariables.py
lldb-api :: lang/cpp/char8_t/TestCxxChar8_t.py
Rather than trying to come up with a sophisticated decorator based off
the deployment target, I marked them all as skipped with a comment
explaining why.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131741
https://reviews.llvm.org/D131658 found a bug in
ReadPseudoRegisterValue which would mean we read out
of bounds if the s register number was high enough.
This adds a memory check to vpush-1-thumb, which
should have been doing that anyway. Then copies that
test and uses the last 4 s registers instead.
Without the mentioned fix we see random values in
the final memory, with the fix it passes.
Reviewed By: fixathon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131663
Patch adds support for fadd, fsub, fdiv, fmul and fcmp to IR interpreter.
~~~
OS Laboratory. Huawei RRI. Saint-Petersburg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126359
1438639a2f removed a test
that was using undefined behaviour setting a non-typed enum
to a value outside its known range.
That test also checked if we formatted the value properly
when it could contain >1 valid enum value.
I don't think there's anything special about how we format
typed vs non-typed enums so I'm adding a test for ScopedEnum
that will expect to see 2 enum values plus extra.
Reviewed By: labath, Michael137, shafik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131472
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.
Setting an enum without a fixed underlying type to a value which is outside the
value range is undefined behavior.
The initializer needs to be a constant expression and therefore this was always
ill-formed we just were not diagnosing it before.
See D130058 and D131307 for more details.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131460
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 test previously was expected to fail on windows. As of my previous
patch (1d2a62afaf) this test now passes on
windows consistently. This patch adjusts the expectations of the test
accordingly.