Commit Graph

2846 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Pavel Labath
66a88f62cd [lldb] Add Function::GetAddress and redirect some uses (#115836)
Many calls to Function::GetAddressRange() were not interested in the
range itself. Instead they wanted to find the address of the function
(its entry point) or the base address for relocation of function-scoped
entities (technically, the two don't need to be the same, but there's
isn't good reason for them not to be). This PR creates a separate
function for retrieving this, and changes the existing
(non-controversial) uses to call that instead.
2025-01-10 09:56:55 +01:00
Jacob Lalonde
774c226863 [LLDB] Add external progress bit category (#120171)
As feedback on #119052, it was recommended I add a new bit to delineate
internal and external progress events. This patch adds this new
category, and sets up Progress.h to support external events via
SBProgress.
2025-01-06 12:49:15 -08:00
Jonas Devlieghere
3dfc1d9b0b [lldb] Use the terminal height for paging editline completions (#119914)
Currently, we arbitrarily paginate editline completions to 40 elements.
On large terminals, that leaves some real-estate unused. On small
terminals, it's pretty annoying to not see the first completions. We can
address both issues by using the terminal height for pagination.

This builds on the improvements of #116456.
2024-12-16 11:11:17 -08:00
Pavel Labath
0dbdc23e78 [lldb] Add ability to rate-limit progress reports (#119377)
For high-frequency multithreaded progress reports, the contention of
taking the progress mutex and the overhead of generating event can
significantly slow down the operation whose progress we are reporting.

This patch adds an (optional) capability to rate-limit them. It's
optional because this approach has one drawback: if the progress
reporting has a pattern where it generates a burst of activity and then
blocks (without reporting anything) for a large amount of time, it can
appear as if less progress was made that it actually was (because we
only reported the first event from the burst and dropped the other
ones).

I've also made a small refactor of the Progress class to better
distinguish between const (don't need protection), atomic (are used on
the hot path) and other (need mutex protection) members.
2024-12-16 11:35:43 +01:00
Adrian Prantl
87659a17d0 Reland: [lldb] Implement a formatter bytecode interpreter in C++
Compared to the python version, this also does type checking and error
handling, so it's slightly longer, however, it's still comfortably
under 500 lines.

Relanding with more explicit type conversions.
2024-12-10 16:37:53 -08:00
Sylvestre Ledru
a2fb70523a Revert "[lldb] Add cast to fix compile error on 32-bit platforms"
This reverts commit f6012a209d.

Revert "[lldb] Add cast to fix compile error on 32-but platforms"

This reverts commit d300337e93.

Revert "[lldb] Improve log message to include missing strings"

This reverts commit 0be3348485.

Revert "[lldb] Add comment"

This reverts commit e2bb47443d.

Revert "[lldb] Implement a formatter bytecode interpreter in C++"

This reverts commit 9a9c1d4a61.
2024-12-11 00:00:44 +01:00
Adrian Prantl
9a9c1d4a61 [lldb] Implement a formatter bytecode interpreter in C++
Compared to the python version, this also does type checking and error
handling, so it's slightly longer, however, it's still comfortably
under 500 lines.
2024-12-10 09:36:38 -08:00
Dave Lee
1a650fde4a [lldb] Load embedded type summary section (#7859) (#8040)
Add support for type summaries embedded into the binary.

These embedded summaries will typically be generated by Swift macros,
but can also be generated by any other means.

rdar://115184658
2024-12-10 09:36:38 -08:00
Pavel Labath
59bb9b915e [lldb] Expose discontinuous functions through SBFunction::GetRanges (#117532)
SBFunction::GetEndAddress doesn't really make sense for discontinuous
functions, so I'm declaring it deprecated. GetStartAddress sort of makes
sense, if one uses it to find the functions entry point, so I'm keeping
that undeprecated.

I've made the test a Shell tests because these make it easier to create
discontinuous functions regardless of the host os and architecture. They
do make testing the python API harder, but I think I've managed to come
up with something not entirely unreasonable.
2024-12-03 10:14:33 +01:00
Miro Bucko
86f7f089ee Fix return value of 'PluginManager::RegisterPlugin()'. (#114120) 2024-11-26 11:29:24 -05:00
Kazuki Sakamoto
c2ffb42893 [lldb] Fix TestLoadUnload.py (#117416)
ELF core debugging fix #117070 broke TestLoadUnload.py tests due to
GetModuleSpec call, ProcessGDBRemote fetches modules from remote. Revise
the original PR, renamed FindBuildId to FindModuleUUID.
2024-11-24 11:04:47 -08:00
Kazuki Sakamoto
1290e95849 [lldb] Fix ELF core debugging (#117070)
DynamicLoader does not use ProcessElfCore NT_FILE entries to get
UUID. Use GetModuleSpec to get UUID from Process.
2024-11-22 13:55:55 -08:00
Jonas Devlieghere
a62e1c8edd [lldb] Fix incorrect nullptr check in DumpAddressAndContent (#117219)
When checking the section load list, the existing code assumed that a
valid execution context guaranteed a valid target. This is a speculative
fix for a crash report (without a reproducer).

rdar://133969831
2024-11-21 13:23:55 -08:00
jeffreytan81
24feaab838 Fix statistics dump to report per-target (#113723)
"statistics dump" currently report the statistics of all targets in
debugger instead of current target. This is wrong because there is a
"statistics dump --all-targets" option that supposed to include
everything.

This PR fixes the issue by only report statistics for current target
instead of all. It also includes the change to reset statistics debug
info/symbol table parsing/indexing time during debugger destroy. This is
required so that we report current statistics if we plan to reuse
lldb/lldb-dap across debug sessions

---------

Co-authored-by: jeffreytan81 <jeffreytan@fb.com>
2024-11-17 20:36:54 -08:00
Pavel Labath
39b2979a43 [lldb] Fix source display for artificial locations (#115876)
When retrieving the location of the function declaration, we were
dropping the file component on the floor, which resulted in an amusingly
confusing situation were we displayed the file containing the
implementation of the function, but used the line number of the
declaration. This patch fixes that.

It required a small refactor Function::GetStartLineSourceLineInfo to
return a SupportFile (instead of just the file spec), which in turn
necessitated changes in a couple of other places as well.
2024-11-13 09:56:00 +01:00
Jonas Devlieghere
f109517d15 [lldb] Support overriding the disassembly CPU & features (#115382)
Add the ability to override the disassembly CPU and CPU features through
a target setting (`target.disassembly-cpu` and
`target.disassembly-features`) and a `disassemble` command option
(`--cpu` and `--features`).

This is especially relevant for architectures like RISC-V which relies
heavily on CPU extensions.

The majority of this patch is plumbing the options through. I recommend
looking at DisassemblerLLVMC and the test for the observable change in
behavior.
2024-11-11 16:27:15 -08:00
aabhinavg
bf01bb851b [lldb] Refactor string manipulation in Debugger.cpp (#92565)
Summary of Changes:

Replaced the ineffective call to `substr` with a more efficient use of
`resize` to truncate the string.
Adjusted the code to use 'resize' instead of 'substr' for better
performance and readability.
Removed unwanted file from the previous commit.
Fixes: #91209

---------

Co-authored-by: aabhinavg <tiwariabhinavak@gmail.com>
2024-11-05 09:20:22 +00:00
jimingham
7dbbd2b251 Fix call site breakpoint patch (#114158)
This fixes the two test suite failures that I missed in the PR:

https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/112939

One was a poorly written test case - it assumed that on connect to a
gdb-remote with a running process, lldb MUST have fetched all the frame
0 registers. In fact, there's no need for it to do so (as the CallSite
patch showed...) and if we don't need to we shouldn't. So I fixed the
test to only expect a `g` packet AFTER calling read_registers.

The other was a place where some code had used 0 when it meant
LLDB_INVALID_LINE_NUMBER, which I had fixed but missed one place where
it was still compared to 0.
2024-10-30 09:28:38 -07:00
Zequan Wu
8193832fb9 [lldb] Search main function with lldb::eFunctionNameTypeFull when getting default file and line. (#113980)
This is to work around the fact that
`SymbolFileNativePDB::FindFunctions` only support
`lldb::eFunctionNameTypeFull` and `lldb::eFunctionNameTypeMethod` now.
Since `main`'s full name is the same as base name (`main`), it's okay to
search with `lldb::eFunctionNameTypeFull` when trying to get the default
file and line. With this, `lldb/test/Shell/Driver/TestSingleQuote.test`
passes on Windows with NativePDB plugin.
2024-10-29 16:23:33 -04:00
jimingham
b54bc104ea Revert "Add the ability to break on call-site locations, improve inli… (#113947)
…ne stepping (#112939)"

This was breaking some gdb-remote packet counting tests on the bots. I
can't see how this patch could cause that breakage, but I'm reverting to
figure that out.

This reverts commit f147437945.
2024-10-28 11:52:32 -07:00
jimingham
f147437945 Add the ability to break on call-site locations, improve inline stepping (#112939)
Previously lldb didn't support setting breakpoints on call site
locations. This patch adds that ability.

It would be very slow if we did this by searching all the debug
information for every inlined subroutine record looking for a call-site
match, so I added one restriction to the call-site support. This change
will find all call sites for functions that also supply at least one
line to the regular line table. That way we can use the fact that the
line table search will move the location to that subsequent line (but
only within the same function). When we find an actually moved source
line match, we can search in the function that contained that line table
entry for the call-site, and set the breakpoint location back to that.

When I started writing tests for this new ability, it quickly became
obvious that our support for virtual inline stepping was pretty buggy.
We didn't print the right file & line number for the breakpoint, and we
didn't set the position in the "virtual inlined stack" correctly when we
hit the breakpoint. We also didn't step through the inlined frames
correctly. There was code to try to detect the right inlined stack
position, but it had been refactored a while back with the comment that
it was super confusing and the refactor was supposed to make it clearer,
but the refactor didn't work either.

That code was made much clearer by abstracting the job of "handling the
stack readjustment" to the various StopInfo's. Previously, there was a
big (and buggy) switch over stop info's. Moving the responsibility to
the stop info made this code much easier to reason about.

We also had no tests for virtual inlined stepping (our inlined stepping
test was actually written specifically to avoid the formation of a
virtual inlined stack... So I also added tests for that along with the
tests for setting the call-site breakpoints.
2024-10-28 10:01:57 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
b852fb1ec5 [lldb] Move ValueObject into its own library (NFC) (#113393)
ValueObject is part of lldbCore for historical reasons, but conceptually
it deserves to be its own library. This does introduce a (link-time) circular
dependency between lldbCore and lldbValueObject, which is unfortunate
but probably unavoidable because so many things in LLDB rely on
ValueObject. We already have cycles and these libraries are never built
as dylibs so while this doesn't improve the situation, it also doesn't
make things worse.

The header includes were updated with the following command:

```
find . -type f -exec sed -i.bak "s%include \"lldb/Core/ValueObject%include \"lldb/ValueObject/ValueObject%" '{}' \;
```
2024-10-24 20:20:48 -07:00
jeffreytan81
25909b811a Fix pointer to reference type (#113596)
We have got customer reporting "v &obj" and "p &obj" reporting different
results.
Turns out it only happens for obj that is itself a reference type which
"v &obj" reports the address of the reference itself instead of the
target object the reference points to. This diverged from C++ semantics.

This PR fixes this issue by returning the address of the dereferenced
object if it is reference type.

A new test is added which fails before.

Co-authored-by: jeffreytan81 <jeffreytan@fb.com>
2024-10-24 17:13:32 -07:00
Kazu Hirata
ca9f396cac [lldb] Avoid repeated hash lookups (NFC) (#113024) 2024-10-19 14:39:25 -07:00
Adrian Prantl
697a455e6f More aggressively deduplicate global warnings based on contents. (#112801)
I've been getting complaints from users being spammed by -gmodules
missing file warnings going out of control because each object file
depends on an entire DAG of PCM files that usually are all missing at
once. To reduce this problem, this patch does two things:

1. Module now maintains a DenseMap<hash, once> that is used to display
each warning only once, based on its actual text.

2. The PCM warning itself is reworded to include less details, such as
the DIE offset, which is only useful to LLDB developers, who can get
this from the dwarf log if they need it. Because the detail is omitted
the hashing from (1) deduplicates the warnings.

rdar://138144624
2024-10-19 09:38:25 -07:00
Kazu Hirata
282ab2f189 [lldb] Avoid repeated hash lookups (NFC) (#112471) 2024-10-15 23:11:30 -07:00
Adrian Prantl
c2750807ba [lldb] Rename CommandReturnObject::Get.*Data -> Get.*String (#112062)
In a later commit, I want to add a method to access diagnostics as
actual structured data, which will make these function names rather
confusing.
2024-10-12 13:36:33 -07:00
Jacob Lalonde
e9c8f75d45 [LLDB][Minidump] Have Minidumps save off and properly read TLS data (#109477)
This patch adds the support to `Process.cpp` to automatically save off
TLS sections, either via loading the memory region for the module, or
via reading `fs_base` via generic register. Then when Minidumps are
loaded, we now specify we want the dynamic loader to be the `POSIXDYLD`
so we can leverage the same TLS accessor code as `ProcessELFCore`. Being
able to access TLS Data is an important step for LLDB generated
minidumps to have feature parity with ELF Core dumps.
2024-10-10 15:59:51 -07:00
Adrian Prantl
d33fa70ddd [lldb] Inline expression evaluator error visualization (#106470)
This patch is a reworking of Pete Lawrence's (@PortalPete) proposal
for better expression evaluator error messages:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/80938

Before:

```
$ lldb -o "expr a+b"
(lldb) expr a+b
error: <user expression 0>:1:1: use of undeclared identifier 'a'
a+b
^
error: <user expression 0>:1:3: use of undeclared identifier 'b'
a+b
  ^
```

After:

```
(lldb) expr a+b
            ^ ^
            │ ╰─ error: use of undeclared identifier 'b'
            ╰─ error: use of undeclared identifier 'a'
```

This eliminates the confusing `<user expression 0>:1:3` source
location and avoids echoing the expression to the console again, which
results in a cleaner presentation that makes it easier to grasp what's
going on. You can't see it here, bug the word "error" is now also in
color, if so desired.

Depends on https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/106442.
2024-09-27 18:09:52 -07:00
Adrian Prantl
41dca012e5 Revert "[lldb] Inline expression evaluator error visualization (#106470)"
This reverts commit 49372d1ccc.
2024-09-27 17:05:37 -07:00
Adrian Prantl
49372d1ccc [lldb] Inline expression evaluator error visualization (#106470)
This patch is a reworking of Pete Lawrence's (@PortalPete) proposal
for better expression evaluator error messages:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/80938

Before:

```
$ lldb -o "expr a+b"
(lldb) expr a+b
error: <user expression 0>:1:1: use of undeclared identifier 'a'
a+b
^
error: <user expression 0>:1:3: use of undeclared identifier 'b'
a+b
  ^
```

After:

```
(lldb) expr a+b
            ^ ^
            │ ╰─ error: use of undeclared identifier 'b'
            ╰─ error: use of undeclared identifier 'a'
```

This eliminates the confusing `<user expression 0>:1:3` source
location and avoids echoing the expression to the console again, which
results in a cleaner presentation that makes it easier to grasp what's
going on. You can't see it here, bug the word "error" is now also in
color, if so desired.

Depends on https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/106442.
2024-09-27 16:32:35 -07:00
Youngsuk Kim
d7796855b8 [lldb] Nits on uses of llvm::raw_string_ostream (NFC) (#108745)
As specified in the docs,
1) raw_string_ostream is always unbuffered and
2) the underlying buffer may be used directly

( 65b13610a5 for further reference )

* Don't call raw_string_ostream::flush(), which is essentially a no-op.
* Avoid unneeded calls to raw_string_ostream::str(), to avoid excess
indirection.
2024-09-16 00:26:51 -04:00
Jonas Devlieghere
90f077cba8 [lldb] Emit signpost intervals for progress events (NFC) (#108498)
Emit signpost intervals for progress events so that when users report an
operation takes a long time, we can investigate the issue with
Instruments.app.
2024-09-13 13:42:55 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
ffa2f539ae [lldb] Print a warning on checksum mismatch (#107968)
Print a warning when the debugger detects a mismatch between the MD5
checksum in the DWARF 5 line table and the file on disk. The warning is
printed only once per file.
2024-09-11 08:53:07 -07:00
Jacob Lalonde
22144e20cb [LLDB][Data Formatters] Calculate average and total time for summary providers within lldb (#102708)
This PR adds a statistics provider cache, which allows an individual
target to keep a rolling tally of it's total time and number of
invocations for a given summary provider. This information is then
available in statistics dump to help slow summary providers, and gleam
more into insight into LLDB's time use.
2024-09-10 09:58:43 -07:00
Adrian Prantl
b798f4bd50 [lldb] Make deep copies of Status explicit (NFC) (#107170) 2024-09-05 12:44:13 -07:00
Adrian Prantl
a0dd90eb7d [lldb] Make conversions from llvm::Error explicit with Status::FromEr… (#107163)
…ror() [NFC]
2024-09-05 12:19:31 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
98bde7fd87 [lldb] Avoid FileSpec indirection where we can use SupportFiles directly
Now that more parts of LLDB know about SupportFiles, avoid going through
FileSpec (and losing the Checksum in the process). Instead, use the
SupportFile directly.
2024-09-03 14:38:39 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
5e7f0dcd69 [lldb] Include checksum in source cache dump (#106773)
This patch updates the source cache dump command to print both the
actual (on-disk) checksum and the expected (line table) checksum. To
achieve that we now read and store the on-disk checksum in the cached
object. The same information will be used in a future path to print a
warning when the checksums differ.
2024-08-30 13:16:26 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
130eddf7a1 [lldb] Deal with SupportFiles in SourceManager (NFC) (#106740)
To support detecting MD5 checksum mismatches, deal with SupportFiles
rather than a plain FileSpecs in the SourceManager.
2024-08-30 10:58:32 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere
ab40ae8ff9 [lldb] Store SupportFiles in SourceManager::File (NFC) (#106639)
To support detecting MD5 checksum mismatches, store a SupportFile rather
than a plain FileSpec in SourceManager::File.
2024-08-30 07:18:55 -07:00
Adrian Prantl
0642cd768b [lldb] Turn lldb_private::Status into a value type. (#106163)
This patch removes all of the Set.* methods from Status.

This cleanup is part of a series of patches that make it harder use the
anti-pattern of keeping a long-lives Status object around and updating
it while dropping any errors it contains on the floor.

This patch is largely NFC, the more interesting next steps this enables
is to:
1. remove Status.Clear()
2. assert that Status::operator=() never overwrites an error
3. remove Status::operator=()

Note that step (2) will bring 90% of the benefits for users, and step
(3) will dramatically clean up the error handling code in various
places. In the end my goal is to convert all APIs that are of the form

`    ResultTy DoFoo(Status& error)
`
to

`    llvm::Expected<ResultTy> DoFoo()
`
How to read this patch?

The interesting changes are in Status.h and Status.cpp, all other
changes are mostly

` perl -pi -e 's/\.SetErrorString/ = Status::FromErrorString/g' $(git
grep -l SetErrorString lldb/source)
`
plus the occasional manual cleanup.
2024-08-27 10:59:31 -07:00
Adrian Prantl
3c0fba4f24 Revert "Revert "[lldb] Extend frame recognizers to hide frames from backtraces (#104523)""
This reverts commit 547917aebd.
2024-08-23 11:06:01 -07:00
Dmitri Gribenko
547917aebd Revert "[lldb] Extend frame recognizers to hide frames from backtraces (#104523)"
This reverts commit f01f80ce6c.

This commit introduces an msan violation. See the discussion on https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/104523.
2024-08-22 13:24:57 +02:00
Adrian Prantl
f01f80ce6c [lldb] Extend frame recognizers to hide frames from backtraces (#104523)
Compilers and language runtimes often use helper functions that are
fundamentally uninteresting when debugging anything but the
compiler/runtime itself. This patch introduces a user-extensible
mechanism that allows for these frames to be hidden from backtraces and
automatically skipped over when navigating the stack with `up` and
`down`.

This does not affect the numbering of frames, so `f <N>` will still
provide access to the hidden frames. The `bt` output will also print a
hint that frames have been hidden.

My primary motivation for this feature is to hide thunks in the Swift
programming language, but I'm including an example recognizer for
`std::function::operator()` that I wished for myself many times while
debugging LLDB.

rdar://126629381


Example output. (Yes, my proof-of-concept recognizer could hide even
more frames if we had a method that returned the function name without
the return type or I used something that isn't based off regex, but it's
really only meant as an example).

before:
```
(lldb) thread backtrace --filtered=false
* thread #1, queue = 'com.apple.main-thread', stop reason = breakpoint 1.1
  * frame #0: 0x0000000100001f04 a.out`foo(x=1, y=1) at main.cpp:4:10
    frame #1: 0x0000000100003a00 a.out`decltype(std::declval<int (*&)(int, int)>()(std::declval<int>(), std::declval<int>())) std::__1::__invoke[abi:se200000]<int (*&)(int, int), int, int>(__f=0x000000016fdff280, __args=0x000000016fdff224, __args=0x000000016fdff220) at invoke.h:149:25
    frame #2: 0x000000010000399c a.out`int std::__1::__invoke_void_return_wrapper<int, false>::__call[abi:se200000]<int (*&)(int, int), int, int>(__args=0x000000016fdff280, __args=0x000000016fdff224, __args=0x000000016fdff220) at invoke.h:216:12
    frame #3: 0x0000000100003968 a.out`std::__1::__function::__alloc_func<int (*)(int, int), std::__1::allocator<int (*)(int, int)>, int (int, int)>::operator()[abi:se200000](this=0x000000016fdff280, __arg=0x000000016fdff224, __arg=0x000000016fdff220) at function.h:171:12
    frame #4: 0x00000001000026bc a.out`std::__1::__function::__func<int (*)(int, int), std::__1::allocator<int (*)(int, int)>, int (int, int)>::operator()(this=0x000000016fdff278, __arg=0x000000016fdff224, __arg=0x000000016fdff220) at function.h:313:10
    frame #5: 0x0000000100003c38 a.out`std::__1::__function::__value_func<int (int, int)>::operator()[abi:se200000](this=0x000000016fdff278, __args=0x000000016fdff224, __args=0x000000016fdff220) const at function.h:430:12
    frame #6: 0x0000000100002038 a.out`std::__1::function<int (int, int)>::operator()(this= Function = foo(int, int) , __arg=1, __arg=1) const at function.h:989:10
    frame #7: 0x0000000100001f64 a.out`main(argc=1, argv=0x000000016fdff4f8) at main.cpp:9:10
    frame #8: 0x0000000183cdf154 dyld`start + 2476
(lldb) 
```

after

```
(lldb) bt
* thread #1, queue = 'com.apple.main-thread', stop reason = breakpoint 1.1
  * frame #0: 0x0000000100001f04 a.out`foo(x=1, y=1) at main.cpp:4:10
    frame #1: 0x0000000100003a00 a.out`decltype(std::declval<int (*&)(int, int)>()(std::declval<int>(), std::declval<int>())) std::__1::__invoke[abi:se200000]<int (*&)(int, int), int, int>(__f=0x000000016fdff280, __args=0x000000016fdff224, __args=0x000000016fdff220) at invoke.h:149:25
    frame #2: 0x000000010000399c a.out`int std::__1::__invoke_void_return_wrapper<int, false>::__call[abi:se200000]<int (*&)(int, int), int, int>(__args=0x000000016fdff280, __args=0x000000016fdff224, __args=0x000000016fdff220) at invoke.h:216:12
    frame #6: 0x0000000100002038 a.out`std::__1::function<int (int, int)>::operator()(this= Function = foo(int, int) , __arg=1, __arg=1) const at function.h:989:10
    frame #7: 0x0000000100001f64 a.out`main(argc=1, argv=0x000000016fdff4f8) at main.cpp:9:10
    frame #8: 0x0000000183cdf154 dyld`start + 2476
Note: Some frames were hidden by frame recognizers
```
2024-08-20 16:01:22 -07:00
Jacob Lalonde
572943e790 [LLDB] Reapply #100443 SBSaveCore Thread list (#104497)
Reapply #100443 and #101770. These were originally reverted due to a
test failure and an MSAN failure. I changed the test attribute to
restrict to x86 (following the other existing tests). I could not
reproduce the test or the MSAN failure and no repo steps were provided.
2024-08-15 16:29:59 -07:00
royitaqi
12fa4b17dc [lldb] Make sure that a Progress "completed" update is always reported at destruction (#102097)
Make all `Progress` destructions to cause `progressEnd` events,
regardless of the value of `m_completed` before the destruction.

Currently, a `Progress` instance with `m_completed != 0 && m_complete !=
m_total` will cause a `progressUpdate` event (not `progressEnd`) at
destruction and. This contradicts with the classdoc: "a progress completed
update is reported even if the user doesn't explicitly cause one to be sent."
2024-08-07 07:58:34 -07:00
Jacob Lalonde
accf5c9bb3 Revert "[LLDB][SBSaveCore] Implement a selectable threadlist for Core… (#102018)
… Options.  (#100443)"

This reverts commit 3e4af61633.

@adrian-prantl FYI

Reverts #100443
2024-08-05 10:17:25 -07:00
Haojian Wu
86f7374078 Revert "[LLDB][SBSaveCore] Fix bug where default values are not propagated. (#101770)"
This reverts commit 34766d0d48 which
caused a msan failure, see comment https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/101770#issuecomment-2268373325 for details.
2024-08-05 09:37:36 +02:00
Jacob Lalonde
34766d0d48 [LLDB][SBSaveCore] Fix bug where default values are not propagated. (#101770)
In #100443, Mach-o and Minidump now only call process API's that take a
`SaveCoreOption` as the container for the style and information if a
thread should be included in the core or not. This introduced a bug
where in subsequent method calls we were not honoring the defaults of
both implementations.

~~To solve this I have made a copy of each SaveCoreOptions that is
mutable by the respective plugin. Originally I wanted to leave the
SaveCoreOptions as non const so these default value mutations could be
shown back to the user. Changing that behavior is outside of the scope
of this bugfix, but is context for why we are making a copy.~~

Removed const on the savecoreoptions so defaults can be inspected by the
user

CC: @Michael137
2024-08-02 18:38:05 -07:00