When opening core files (and also in some other situations) we could end
up with two vdso modules. This could happen because the vdso module is
very special, and over the years, we have accumulated various ways to
load it.
In D10800, we added one mechanism for loading it, which took the form of
a generic load-from-memory capability. Unfortunately loading an elf file
from memory is not possible (because the loader never loads the entire
file), and our attempts to do so were causing crashes. So, in D34352, we
partially reverted D10800 and implemented a custom mechanism specific to
the vdso.
Unfortunately, enough of D10800 remained such that, under the right
circumstances, it could end up loading a second (non-functional) copy of
the vdso module. This happened when the process plugin did not support
the extended MemoryRegionInfo query (added in D22219, to workaround a
different bug), which meant that the loader plugin was not able to
recognise that the linux-vdso.so.1 module (this is how the loader calls
it) is in fact the same as the [vdso] module (the name used in
/proc/$PID/maps) we loaded before. This typically happened in a core
file, as they don't store this kind of information.
This patch fixes the issue by completing the revert of D10800 -- the
memory loading code is removed completely. It also reduces the scope of
the hackaround introduced in D22219 -- it isn't completely sound and is
only relevant for fairly old (but still supported) versions of android.
I added the memory loading logic to the wasm dynamic loader, which has
since appeared and is relying on this feature (it even has a test). As
far as I can tell loading wasm modules from memory is possible and
reliable. MachO memory loading is not affected by this patch, as it uses
a completely different code path.
Since the scenarios/patches I described came without test cases, I have
created two new gdb-client tests cases for them. They're not
particularly readable, but right now, this is the best way we can
simulate the behavior (bugs) of a particular dynamic linker.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122660
This patch is another attempt to fix platform selection on Apple
Silicon. It partially undoes D117340 which tried to fix the issue by
always instantiating a remote-ios platform for "iPhone and iPad Apps on
Apple Silicon Macs".
While the previous patch worked for attaching, it broke launching and
everything else that expects the remote platform to be connected. I made
an attempt to work around that, but quickly found out that there were
just too may places that had this assumption baked in.
This patch takes a different approach and reverts back to marking the
host platform compatible with iOS triples. This brings us back to the
original situation where platform selection was broken for remote iOS
debugging on Apple Silicon. To fix that, we now look at the process'
host architecture to differentiate between iOS binaries running remotely
and iOS binaries running locally.
I tested the following scenarios, which now all uses the desired
platform:
- Launching an iOS binary on macOS: uses the host platform
- Attaching to an iOS binary on macOS: uses the host platform
- Attaching to a remote iOS binary: uses the remote-ios platform
rdar://89840215
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121444
Replace forms of `assertTrue(err.Success())` with `assertSuccess(err)` (added in D82759).
* `assertSuccess` prints out the error's message
* `assertSuccess` expresses explicit higher level semantics, both to the reader and for test failure output
* `assertSuccess` seems not to be well known, using it where possible will help spread knowledge
* `assertSuccess` statements are more succinct
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119616
Add Thread::GetSiginfo() and SBThread::GetSiginfo() methods to retrieve
the siginfo value from server.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118055
Add Thread::GetSiginfo() and SBThread::GetSiginfo() methods to retrieve
the siginfo value from server.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118055
Provide minimal register definition defaults for working with servers
that implement neither target.xml nor qRegisterInfo packets. This is
useful e.g. when interacting with FreeBSD's kernel minimal gdbserver
that does not send target.xml but uses the same layout for its supported
register subset as GDB.
The prerequisite for this is the ability to determine the correct
architecture, e.g. from the target executable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116896
Previously we would persist the flags indicating whether the remote side
supports a particular feature across reconnects, which is obviously not
a good idea.
I implement the clearing by nuking (its the only way to be sure :) the
entire GDBRemoteCommunication object in the disconnect operation and
creating a new one upon connection. This allows us to maintain a nice
invariant that the GDBRemoteCommunication object (which is now a
pointer) exists only if it is connected. The downside to that is that a
lot of functions now needs to check the validity of the pointer instead
of blindly accessing the object.
The process communication does not suffer from the same issue because we
always destroy the entire Process object for a relaunch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116539
If LLVM is configured without X86 as one of its TARGETS_TO_BUILD, then lldb
will crash when using X86 disassembler (which it does while running `image
show-unwind`).
This reverts commit 640beb38e7.
That commit caused performance degradtion in Quicksilver test QS:sGPU and a functional test failure in (rocPRIM rocprim.device_segmented_radix_sort).
Reverting until we have a better solution to s_cselect_b64 codegen cleanup
Change-Id: Ibf8e397df94001f248fba609f072088a46abae08
Reviewed By: kzhuravl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115960
Change-Id: Id169459ce4dfffa857d5645a0af50b0063ce1105
We were using the client socket close as a way to terminate the handler
thread. But this kind of concurrent access to the same socket is not
safe. It also complicates running the handler without a dedicated thread
(next patch).
Instead, here I add an explicit way for a packet handler to request
termination. Waiting for lldb to terminate the connection would almost
be sufficient, but in the pty test we want to keep the pty open so we
can examine its state. Ability to disconnect at an arbitrary point may
be useful for testing other aspects of lldb functionality as well.
The way this works is that now each packet handler can optionally return
a list of responses (instead of just one). One of those responses (it
only makes sense for it to be the last one) can be a special
RESPONSE_DISCONNECT object, which triggers a disconnection (via a new
TerminateConnectionException).
As the mock server now cleans up the connection whenever it disconnects,
the pty test needs to explicitly dup(2) the descriptors in order to
inspect the post-disconnect state.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114156
The reworking of the gdb client tests into the PlatformClientTestBase broke
the test for this. I did the mutatis mutandis for the move, but the test
still fails. Reverting till I have time to figure out why.
This reverts commit b715b79d54.
We don't actually need a local copy of the main executable to debug
a remote process. So instead of treating "no local module" as an error,
see if the LaunchInfo has an executable it wants lldb to use, and if so
use it. Then report whatever error the remote server returns.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113521
This infrastructure has proven proven its worth, so give it a more
prominent place.
My immediate motivation for this is the desire to reuse this
infrastructure for qemu platform testing, but I believe this move makes
sense independently of that. Moving this code to the packages tree will
allow as to add more structure to the gdb client tests -- currently they
are all crammed into the same test folder as that was the only way they
could access this code.
I'm splitting the code into two parts while moving it. The first once
contains just the generic gdb protocol wrappers, while the other one
contains the unit test glue. The reason for that is that for qemu
testing, I need to run the gdb code in a separate process, so I will
only be using the first part there.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113893
[NFC] This patch replaces master and slave with primary and secondary
respectively when referring to pseudoterminals/file descriptors.
Reviewed By: clayborg, teemperor
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113687
GDB and LLDB use different signal models. GDB uses a predefined set
of signal codes, and maps platform's signos to them. On the other hand,
LLDB has historically simply passed native signos.
In order to improve compatibility between LLDB and gdbserver, the GDB
signal model should be used. However, GDB does not provide a mapping
for all existing signals on Linux and unsupported signals are passed
as 'unknown'. Limiting LLDB to this behavior could be considered
a regression.
To get the best of both worlds, use the LLDB signal model when talking
to lldb-server, and the GDB signal model otherwise. For this purpose,
new versions of lldb-server indicate "native-signals+" via qSupported.
At the same time, we also detect older versions of lldb-server
via QThreadSuffixSupported for backwards compatibility. If neither test
succeeds, we assume gdbserver or another implementation using GDB model.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108078
This patch fixes an amusing bug where a Platform::Kill operation would
happily terminate a proces on a completely different platform, as long
as they have the same process ID. This was due to the fact that the
implementation was iterating through all known (debugged) processes in
order terminate them directly.
This patch just deletes that logic, and makes everything go through the
OS process termination APIs. While it would be possible to fix the logic
to check for a platform match, it seemed to me that the implementation
was being too smart for its own good -- accessing random Process
objects without knowing anything about their state is risky at best.
Going through the os ensures we avoid any races.
I also "upgrade" the termination signal to a SIGKILL to ensure the
process really dies after this operation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113184
Add a new serial:// protocol along with SerialPort that provides a new
API to open serial ports. The URL consists of serial device path
followed by URL-style options, e.g.:
serial:///dev/ttyS0?baud=115200&parity=even
If no options are provided, the serial port is only set to raw mode
and the other attributes remain unchanged. Attributes provided via
options are modified to the specified values. Upon closing the serial
port, its original attributes are restored.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111355
gdbserver does not expose combined ymm* registers but rather XSAVE-style
split xmm* and ymm*h portions. Extend value_regs to support combining
multiple registers and use it to create user-friendly ymm* registers
that are combined from split xmm* and ymm*h portions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108937
gdbserver does not expose combined ymm* registers but rather XSAVE-style
split xmm* and ymm*h portions. Extend value_regs to support combining
multiple registers and use it to create user-friendly ymm* registers
that are combined from split xmm* and ymm*h portions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108937
Fix a bug introduced while refactoring ABIAArch64::AugmentRegisterInfo()
that caused subregisters to be added even if they were already present.
Instead, abort immediately if at least one subregister is found
(following ABIX86). While at it, add a test for that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111881
Adjust the encoding and format applied to i387_ext and vec* type
registers from gdbserver to match lldb-server. Both types are now
displayed as vector of uint8 instead of float and integer formats used
before. Additionally, this fixes display of STi registers when they do
not carry floating-point data (they are also used to hold MMX vectors).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108468
Remove the redudant "0x" prefix in the "dirty-pages" key of
qMemoryRegionInfo packet. The client accepts hex values both with
and without the prefix.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110510
Create pseudo-registers on the AArch64 target if they are not provided
by the remote server. This is the case for gdbserver. The created
registers are:
- 32-bit wN partials for 64-bit xN registers
- double precision floating-point dN registers (overlapping with vN)
- single precision floating-point sN registers (overlapping with vN)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109876
Rewrite the register reading/writing tests to use explicit qRegisterInfo
packets rather than relying on ARM registers being hardcoded in LLDB.
While at it, use x86_64 for tests -- since it was easier for me to get
the register lists from that architecture.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111496
This patch allows LLDB to accept register sizes which are not aligned
to 8 bits bitsize boundary. This fixes a crash in LLDB when connecting
to OpenOCD stub. GDB xml description allows for non-aligned bit lengths
but they are rounded off to nearest byte during transfer. In case of
OpenOCD some of SOC specific system registers were less than a single
byte in length and were causing LLDB to crash.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111131
Fix the termination of "process connect" (and "gdb-remote") to kill
the process rather than attempting to disconnect the platform.
The latter only results in an error since we did not use "platform
connect", and apparently process-level connections (at least via
gdb-remote) do not really support disconnecting.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110996
If the remote gdbserver's qfThreadInfo reply has a trailing comma,
GDBRemoteCommunicationClient::GetCurrentProcessAndThreadIDs will return
an empty vector of thread ids. This will cause lldb to recurse through
three functions trying to get the list of threads, until it blows its
stack and crashes.
A trailing comma is a malformed response, but it shouldn't cause lldb to
crash. This patch will return the tids received before the malformed
response.
Reviewed By: clayborg, labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109937
Always send PID in the detach packet when multiprocess extensions are
enabled. This is required by qemu's GDB server, as plain 'D' packet
results in an error and the emulated system is not resumed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110033
Alias the "sp" register to "x31" on AArch64 if one is present and does
not have the alt_name. This is the case when connecting to gdbserver.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109695
Recognize lr/sp/fp by their numeric register names in the ABI plugin.
This is necessary to mark them appropriately when interfacing with
gdbserver.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109691
Try determining the process architecture from <architecture/> tag
unconditionally, rather than for very specific cases. Generic gdbserver
implementations do not support LLDB-specific packets used to determine
the process architecture, therefore this fallback is necessary to
support architecture-specific behavior on these targets. Rather than
maintaining a mapping of all known architectures, just try mapping
the GDB values into triplets, as that is going to work most of the time.
This change is confirmed to fix LLDB against gdbserver when debugging
i386 and aarch64 executables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109272
Update GetRegisterInfoByName() methods to support getting registers
by a generic name independently of alt_name entries in the register
context. This makes it possible to use generic names when interacting
with gdbserver (that does not supply alt_names). It also makes it
possible to remove some of the duplicated information from register
context declarations and/or use alt_names for another purpose.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108554
GDB uses normalized errno values for vFile errors. Implement
the translation between them and system errno values in the gdb-remote
plugin.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108148
Fall back to QEnvironmentHexEncoded if QEnvironment is not supported.
The latter packet is an LLDB extension, while the former is universally
supported.
Add tests for both QEnvironment and QEnvironmentHexEncoded packets,
including both use due to characters that need escaping and fallback
when QEnvironment is not supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108018