Commit Graph

2170 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Greg Clayton
2dd7e5e222 Add support for parsing Breakpad minidump files that can have extra padding in the module, thread and memory lists.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49579

llvm-svn: 337694
2018-07-23 14:16:08 +00:00
Jason Molenda
a2476ab7c9 Remove incorrect thread-pc-values clearing
from ProcessGDBRemote::UpdateThreadIDsFromStopReplyThreadsValue.

Patch by Venkata Ramanaiah.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48868

llvm-svn: 336956
2018-07-12 22:45:41 +00:00
Raphael Isemann
4d51a90297 Get rid of the C-string parameter in DoExecute
Summary:
This patch gets rid of the C-string parameter in the RawCommandObject::DoExecute function,
making the code simpler and less memory unsafe.

There seems to be a assumption in some command objects that this parameter could be a nullptr,
but from what I can see the rest of the API doesn't actually allow this (and other command
objects and related code pieces dereference this parameter without any checks).

Especially CommandObjectRegexCommand has error handling code for a nullptr that is now gone.

Reviewers: davide, jingham, teemperor

Reviewed By: teemperor

Subscribers: jingham, lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49207

llvm-svn: 336955
2018-07-12 22:28:52 +00:00
Leonard Mosescu
2ae3ec3b81 Restructure the minidump loading path and add early & explicit consistency checks
Corrupted minidumps was leading to unpredictable behavior.

This change adds explicit consistency checks for the minidump early on. The
checks are not comprehensive but they should catch obvious structural violations:

streams with type == 0
duplicate streams (same type)
overlapping streams
truncated minidumps

Another early check is to make sure we actually support the minidump architecture
instead of crashing at a random place deep inside LLDB.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49202

llvm-svn: 336918
2018-07-12 17:27:18 +00:00
Eric Christopher
4bfb8011f7 Remove unused variable m_header as it hasn't been used since it was
added in 2016.

llvm-svn: 336884
2018-07-12 03:52:45 +00:00
Stella Stamenova
62c76db4ee [windows] Fix out-of-memory failure in some of the tests
Summary: When ReadProcessMemory fails, bytes_read is sometimes set to a large garbage value. In that case, we need to set it back to zero before returning or the garbage value will be used to allocate memory later causing LLDB to crash with an out of memory error.

Reviewers: asmith, zturner

Reviewed By: zturner

Subscribers: zturner, asmith, stella.stamenova, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49159

llvm-svn: 336865
2018-07-11 22:47:35 +00:00
Stella Stamenova
45d8134c3b [windows] LLDB shows the wrong values when register read is executed at a frame other than zero
Summary:
This is a clean version of the change suggested here: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37495

The main change is to follow the same pattern as non-windows targets and use an unwinder object to retrieve the register context. I also changed a couple of the comments to actually log, so that issues with unsupported scenarios can be tracked down more easily. Lastly, ClearStackFrames is implemented in the base class, so individual thread implementations don't have to override it.

Reviewers: asmith, zturner, aleksandr.urakov

Reviewed By: aleksandr.urakov

Subscribers: emaste, stella.stamenova, tatyana-krasnukha, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49111

llvm-svn: 336732
2018-07-10 22:05:33 +00:00
Stella Stamenova
696ce3770b [lldbsuite, windows] Don't crash LLDB when we try to retrieve a register on Windows
Summary:
1) When ReadRegister is called with a null register into on Windows, rather than crashing due to an access violation, simply return false. Not all registers and properties will be read or calculated correctly, but that is consistent with other platforms that also return false in that case
2) Update a couple of tests to reference pr37995 as their reason for failure since it is much more accurate. Support for floating point registers doesn't exist on Windows at all, rather than having issues.

Reviewers: asmith, labath, zturner

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48844

llvm-svn: 336147
2018-07-02 21:50:31 +00:00
Jim Ingham
d7e126c491 Use the API's to get the TargetSP.
llvm-svn: 335690
2018-06-26 23:54:50 +00:00
Pavel Labath
2f93fd1f50 Represent invalid UUIDs as UUIDs with length zero
Summary:
During the previous attempt to generalize the UUID class, it was
suggested that we represent invalid UUIDs as length zero (previously, we
used an all-zero UUID for that). This meant that some valid build-ids
could not be represented (it's possible however unlikely that a checksum of
some file would be zero) and complicated adding support for variable
length build-ids (should a 16-byte empty UUID compare equal to a 20-byte
empty UUID?).

This patch resolves these issues by introducing a canonical
representation for an invalid UUID. The slight complication here is that
some clients (MachO) actually use the all-zero notation to mean "no UUID
has been set". To keep this use case working (while making it very
explicit about which construction semantices are wanted), replaced the
UUID constructors and the SetBytes functions with named factory methods.
- "fromData" creates a UUID from the given data, and it treats all bytes
  equally.
- "fromOptionalData" first checks the data contents - if all bytes are
  zero, it treats this as an invalid/empty UUID.

Reviewers: clayborg, sas, lemo, davide, espindola

Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits, arichardson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48479

llvm-svn: 335612
2018-06-26 15:12:20 +00:00
Tatyana Krasnukha
04803b3ef2 Change AddressClass type from 'enum' to 'enum class'.
If we have a function with signature f(addr_t, AddressClass), it is easy to muddle up the order of arguments without any warnings from compiler. 'enum class' prevents passing integer in place of AddressClass and vice versa.

llvm-svn: 335599
2018-06-26 13:06:54 +00:00
Pavel Labath
a174bcbf03 Remove UUID::SetFromCString
Replace uses with SetFromStringRef. NFC.

llvm-svn: 335246
2018-06-21 15:24:39 +00:00
Pavel Labath
60f028ff03 Replace HostInfo::GetLLDBPath with specific functions
Summary:
Instead of a function taking an enum value determining which path to
return, we now have a suite of functions, each returning a single path
kind. This makes it easy to move the python-path function into a
specific plugin in a follow-up commit.

All the users of GetLLDBPath were converted to call specific functions
instead. Most of them were hard-coding the enum value anyway, so this
conversion was simple. The only exception was SBHostOS, which I've
changed to use a switch on the incoming enum value.

Reviewers: clayborg, zturner

Subscribers: lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48272

llvm-svn: 335052
2018-06-19 15:09:07 +00:00
Pavel Labath
2272c4811f Use llvm::VersionTuple instead of manual version marshalling
Summary:
This has multiple advantages:
- we need only one function argument/instance variable instead of three
- no need to default initialize variables
- no custom parsing code
- VersionTuple has comparison operators, which makes version comparisons much
  simpler

Reviewers: zturner, friss, clayborg, jingham

Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47889

llvm-svn: 334950
2018-06-18 15:02:23 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere
937348cd13 [FileSpec] Make style argument mandatory for SetFile. NFC
SetFile has an optional style argument which defaulted to the native
style. This patch makes that argument mandatory so clients of the
FileSpec class are forced to think about the correct syntax.

At the same time this introduces a (protected) convenience method to
update the file from within the FileSpec class that keeps the current
style.

These two changes together prevent a potential pitfall where the style
might be forgotten, leading to the path being updated and the style
unintentionally being changed to the host style.

llvm-svn: 334663
2018-06-13 22:08:14 +00:00
Stella Stamenova
9d6fabf9e3 [lit] Split test_set_working_dir TestProcessLaunch into two tests and fix it on Windows
Summary:
test_set_working_dir was testing two scenario: failure to set the working dir because of a non existent directory and succeeding to set the working directory. Since the negative case fails on both Linux and Windows, the positive case was never tested. I split the test into two which allows us to always run both the negative and positive cases. The positive case now succeeds on Linux and the negative case still fails.
During the investigation, it turned out that lldbtest.py will try to execute a process launch command up to 3 times if the command failed. This means that we could be covering up intermittent failures by running any test that does process launch multiple times without ever realizing it. I've changed the counter to 1 (though it can still be overwritten with the environment variable).
This change also fixes both the positive and negative cases on Windows. There were a few issues:
1) In ProcessLauncherWindows::LaunchProcess, the error was not retrieved until CloseHandle was possibly called. Since CloseHandle is also a system API, its success would overwrite any existing error that could be retrieved using GetLastError. So by the time the error was retrieved, it was now a success.
2) In DebuggerThread::StopDebugging TerminateProcess was called on the process handle regardless of whether it was a valid handle. This was causing the process to crash when the handle was LLDB_INVALID_PROCESS (0xFFFFFFFF).
3) In ProcessWindows::DoLaunch we need to check that the working directory exists before launching the process to have the same behavior as other platforms which first check the directory and then launch process. This way we also control the exact error string.

Reviewers: labath, zturner, asmith, jingham

Reviewed By: labath

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48050

llvm-svn: 334642
2018-06-13 19:02:44 +00:00
Alex Langford
6500c693a5 Remove more dead code from NativeProcessLinux
This should have been removed in r334333.

llvm-svn: 334336
2018-06-08 22:28:41 +00:00
Alex Langford
bd620effc8 Delete dead code in NativeProcessLinux
As far as I can tell, this code has always been guarded by `#if 0`. If
this is useful code, it can be added back.

llvm-svn: 334333
2018-06-08 22:14:29 +00:00
Tatyana Krasnukha
74fd1a6587 Fix DynamicRegisterInfo copying/moving issue.
Summary:
Default copy/move constructors and assignment operators leave wrong m_sets[i].registers pointers.

Made the class movable and non-copyable (it's difficult to imagine when it needs to be copied).

Reviewers: clayborg

Reviewed By: clayborg

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47728

llvm-svn: 334282
2018-06-08 11:28:15 +00:00
Stella Stamenova
36d457c20d [lldb, process] Fix occasional hang when launching a process in LLDB
Summary:
Occasionally, when launching a process in lldb (especially on windows, but not limited to), lldb will hang before the process is launched and it will never recover. This happens because the timing of the processing of the state changes can be slightly different. The state changes that are issued are:

1) SetPublicState(eStateLaunching)
2) SetPrivateState(eStateLaunching)
3) SetPublicState(eStateStopped)
4) SetPrivateState(eStateStopped)

What we expect to see is:
public state: launching -> launching -> stopped
private state: launching -> stopped

What we see is:
public state: launching -> stopped -> launching
private state: launching -> stopped

The second launching change to the public state is issued when WaitForProcessStopPrivate calls HandlePrivateEvent on the event which was created when the private state was set to launching. HandlePrivateEvent has logic to determine whether to broadcase the event and a launching event is *always* broadcast. At the same time, when the stopped event is processed by WaitForProcessStopPrivate next, the function exists and that event is never broadcast, so the public state remains as launching.

HandlePrivateEvent does two things: determine whether there's a next action as well as determine whether to broadcast the event that was processed. There's only ever a next action set if we are trying to attach to a process, but WaitForProcessStopPrivate is only ever called when we are launching a process or connecting remotely, so the first part of HandlePrivateEvent (handling the next action) is irrelevant for WaitForProcessStopPrivate. As far as broadcasting the event is concerned, since we are handling state changes that already occurred to the public state (and are now duplicated in the private state), I believe the broadcast step is unnecessary also (and in fact, it causes the hang).

This change removes the call to HandlePrivateEvent from inside WaitForProcessStopPrivate.

Incidentally, there was also a bug filed recently that is the same issue: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37496

Reviewers: asmith, labath, zturner, jingham

Reviewed By: zturner, jingham

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47609

llvm-svn: 333781
2018-06-01 19:14:53 +00:00
Bruce Mitchener
4ebdee0a59 Typo fixes.
Reviewers: javed.absar

Subscribers: ki.stfu, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47421

llvm-svn: 333399
2018-05-29 09:10:46 +00:00
Raphael Isemann
02d4ff4498 Add missing includes to some LLDB headers.
Summary: When compiling with modules, these missing includes cause the build to fail (as the header can't be compiled into a module).

Subscribers: ki.stfu, lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47412

llvm-svn: 333345
2018-05-26 14:59:14 +00:00
James Y Knight
1a05affa80 Remove spurious dependency on Process/elf-core from Process/Utility.
These checks do absolutely nothing other than cause a library layering
violation in the code.

llvm-svn: 333134
2018-05-23 22:04:20 +00:00
James Y Knight
2ad4821223 Normalize some lldb #include statements.
Most non-local includes of header files living under lldb/sources/
were specified with the full path starting after sources/. However, in
a few instances, other sub-directories were added to include paths, or

Normalize those few instances to follow the style used by the rest of
the codebase, to make it easier to understand.

llvm-svn: 333035
2018-05-22 22:53:50 +00:00
Pavel Labath
4c7763eb2f Enable ProcessMachCore plugin on non-apple platforms
Summary:
The plugin already builds fine on other platforms (linux, at least). All
that was necessary was to revitalize the hack in PlatformDarwinKernel
(not a very pretty hack, but it gets us going at least).

I haven't done a thorough investigation of the state of the plugin on
other platforms, but at least the two core file tests we have seem to
pass, so I enable them.

Reviewers: JDevlieghere, jasonmolenda

Subscribers: lldb-commits, mgorny

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47133

llvm-svn: 332997
2018-05-22 16:33:43 +00:00
Eric Liu
ff9c4ff117 [lldb] Fix compile warnings in r332702
Summary:
- Fix #include path
- Fix warning:
````
error: format specifies type 'unsigned long long' but the argument has type 'uint64_t'
(aka 'unsigned long') [-Werror,-Wformat]
 ```

Reviewers: labath, javed.absar

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47072

llvm-svn: 332733
2018-05-18 16:19:52 +00:00
Pavel Labath
90da3ce3a9 Add back #ifdef __APPLE__ to RegisterContextDarwin_xxx::NumSupportedHardwareWatchpoints
It turns out these class still contained some os-specific functionality,
but I did not notice that originally, as it was #ifdef arm(64). This
adds back the __APPLE__ condition to these particular functions,
unbreaking arm builds on other OSs.

llvm-svn: 332710
2018-05-18 12:54:21 +00:00
Pavel Labath
981a34c428 Make ObjectFileMachO work on non-darwin platforms
Summary:
Before this patch we were unable to write cross-platform MachO tests
because the parsing code did not compile on other platforms. The reason
for that was that ObjectFileMachO depended on
RegisterContextDarwin_arm(64)? (presumably for core file parsing) and
the two Register Context classes uses constants from the system headers
(KERN_SUCCESS, KERN_INVALID_ARGUMENT).

As far as I can tell, these two files don't actually interact with the
darwin kernel -- they are used only in ObjectFileMachO and MacOSX-Kernel
process plugin (even though it has "kernel" in the name, this one
communicates with it via network packets and not syscalls). For the time
being I have created OS-independent definitions of these constants and
made the register context classes use those. Long term, the error
handling in these classes should be probably changed to use more
standard mechanisms such as Status or Error classes.

This is the only change necessary (apart from build system glue) to make
ObjectFileMachO work on other platforms. To demonstrate that, I remove
REQUIRES:darwin from our (only) cross-platform mach-o test.

Reviewers: jasonmolenda, aprantl, clayborg, javed.absar

Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits, kristof.beyls

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46934

llvm-svn: 332702
2018-05-18 11:35:46 +00:00
Stella Stamenova
5b5350ddee [Windows, Process] LLDB reads wrong registers on 64bit Windows
Summary: LLDB reads wrong registers on 64bit Windows because RegisterContextWindows_x64::GetRegisterInfoAtIndex returns wrong reference.
I encountered broken backtrace when the program stopped at function which does not have prologue code, such as compiled with '-fomit-frame-pointer'.
In this situation, CFA is equal to rsp but LLDB reads r9.

RegisterContextWindows_x64::GetRegisterInfoAtIndex depends the order of lldb_XXX_x86_64 values, but RegisterIndex/g_register_infos/g_gpr_reg_indices does not follow order.

In source/Plugins/Process/Utility/lldb-x86-register-enums.h
The order of GPRs is rax, rbx, rcx, rdx, rdi, rsi, rbp, rsp, r8, ...

In source/Plugins/Process/Windows/Common/x64/RegisterContextWindows_x64.cpp
The order of GPRs is rax, rbx, rcx, rdx, rdi, rsi, r8, r9, r10, ...

Patch by Kenji Koyanagi

llvm-svn: 332671
2018-05-17 21:42:37 +00:00
Stella Stamenova
0fd67b537b [Windows, Process] Fix an issue in windows thread handling that was causing LLDB to hang
Summary: The function ResumeThread on Windows returns a DWORD which is an unsigned int. In TargetThreadWindows::DoResume, there's code that determines how many times to call ResumeThread based on whether the return value is greater than 0. Since the function returns -1 (as an unsigned int) on failure, this was getting stuck in an infinite loop if ResumeThread failed for any reason. The correct thing to do is check whether the return value is -1 and then return the appropriate error instead of ignoring the return value.

Reviewers: asmith, zturner, labath

Reviewed By: zturner

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47020

llvm-svn: 332670
2018-05-17 21:34:24 +00:00
Pavel Labath
19dd1a0ea6 Convert all RunShellCommand functions to use the Timeout class
this completes the Timeout migration started in r331880 with the
Predicate class.

llvm-svn: 331970
2018-05-10 10:46:03 +00:00
Pavel Labath
4b13033149 Fix Windows build for the Predicate.h refactor in r331880
llvm-svn: 331882
2018-05-09 14:49:43 +00:00
Pavel Labath
3879fe0099 Modernize and clean-up the Predicate class
Summary:
The comments on this class were out of date with the implementation, and
the implementation itself was inconsistent with our usage of the Timeout
class (I started converting everything to use this class back in D27136,
but I missed this one). I avoid duplicating the waiting logic by
introducing a templated WaitFor function, and make other functions
delegate to that. This function can be also used as a replacement for
the unused WaitForBitToBeSet functions I removed, if it turns out to be
necessary.

As this changes the meaning of a "zero" timeout, I tracked down all the
callers of these functions and updated them accordingly. Propagating the
changes to all the callers of RunShellCommand was a bit too much for
this patch, so I stopped there and will continue that in a follow-up
patch.

I also add some basic unittests for the functions I modified.

Reviewers: jingham, clayborg

Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46580

llvm-svn: 331880
2018-05-09 14:29:30 +00:00
Pavel Labath
38d67db39c Remove the timed_out out-argument from Predicate::WaitForValueEqualTo
The function can only return in one of two ways: the Predicate value is
successfully set within the allotted time, or it isn't (the wait times
out). These states can be represented in the return value, and the extra
arg adds no value.

llvm-svn: 331458
2018-05-03 15:33:41 +00:00
Leonard Mosescu
9fecd37220 Use the UUID from the minidump's CodeView Record for placeholder modules
This change adds support for two types of Minidump CodeView records:

PDB70 (reference: https://crashpad.chromium.org/doxygen/structcrashpad_1_1CodeViewRecordPDB70.html)
This is by far the most common record type.

ELF BuildID (found in Breakpad/Crashpad generated minidumps)
This would set a proper UUID for placeholder modules, in turn enabling
an accurate match with local module images.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46292

llvm-svn: 331394
2018-05-02 20:06:17 +00:00
Adrian Prantl
d8f460e864 Enable AUTOBRIEF in doxygen configuration.
This brings the LLDB configuration closer to LLVM's and removes visual
clutter in the source code by removing the @brief commands from
comments.

This patch also reflows the paragraphs in all doxygen comments.

See also https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46321

llvm-svn: 331373
2018-05-02 16:55:16 +00:00
Adrian Prantl
05097246f3 Reflow paragraphs in comments.
This is intended as a clean up after the big clang-format commit
(r280751), which unfortunately resulted in many of the comment
paragraphs in LLDB being very hard to read.

FYI, the script I used was:

import textwrap
import commands
import os
import sys
import re
tmp = "%s.tmp"%sys.argv[1]
out = open(tmp, "w+")
with open(sys.argv[1], "r") as f:
  header = ""
  text = ""
  comment = re.compile(r'^( *//) ([^ ].*)$')
  special = re.compile(r'^((([A-Z]+[: ])|([0-9]+ )).*)|(.*;)$')
  for line in f:
      match = comment.match(line)
      if match and not special.match(match.group(2)):
          # skip intentionally short comments.
          if not text and len(match.group(2)) < 40:
              out.write(line)
              continue

          if text:
              text += " " + match.group(2)
          else:
              header = match.group(1)
              text = match.group(2)

          continue

      if text:
          filled = textwrap.wrap(text, width=(78-len(header)),
                                 break_long_words=False)
          for l in filled:
              out.write(header+" "+l+'\n')
              text = ""

      out.write(line)

os.rename(tmp, sys.argv[1])

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46144

llvm-svn: 331197
2018-04-30 16:49:04 +00:00
Ed Maste
592d29a3b9 FreeBSD: propagate error to user if memory access fails
Previously, an attempt to read an unreadable address reported zeros.
Now, if DoReadMemory or DoWriteMemory encounters error then return 0
(bytes read or written) so that the error is reported to the user.

llvm.org/pr37190

llvm-svn: 330500
2018-04-21 11:23:56 +00:00
Pavel Labath
5976f30821 Attempt to fix TestMiniDump on windows
It was failing because the modules names were coming out as
C:\Windows\System32/MSVCP120D.dll (last separator is a forward slash) on
windows.

There are two issues at play here:
- the first problem is that the paths in minidump were being parsed as a
  host path. This meant that on posix systems the whole path was
  interpreted as a file name.
- on windows the path was split into a directory-filename pair
  correctly, but then when it was reconsituted, the last separator ended
  up being a forward slash because SBFileSpec.fullpath was joining them
  with '/' unconditionally.

I fix the first issue by parsing the minidump paths according to the
path syntax of the host which produced the dump, which should make the
test behavior on posix&windows identical. The last path will still be a
forward slash because of the second issue. We should probably fix the
"fullpath" property to do something smarter in the future.

llvm-svn: 330314
2018-04-19 09:38:42 +00:00
Leonard Mosescu
47196a25bb Improve LLDB's handling of non-local minidumps
Normally, LLDB is creating a high-fidelity representation of a live
process, including a list of modules and sections, with the 
associated memory address ranges. In order to build the module and
section map LLDB tries to locate the local module image (object file)
and will parse it.

This does not work for postmortem debugging scenarios where the crash
dump (minidump in this case) was captured on a different machine.

Fortunately the minidump format encodes enough information about
each module's memory range to allow us to create placeholder modules.
This enables most LLDB functionality involving address-to-module
translations.

Also, we may want to completly disable the search for matching
local object files if we load minidumps unless we can prove that the
local image matches the one from the crash origin.
(not part of this change, see: llvm.org/pr35193)

Example: Identify the module from a stack frame PC:

Before:
  thread #1, stop reason = Exception 0xc0000005 encountered at address 0x164d14
    frame #0: 0x00164d14
    frame #1: 0x00167c79
    frame #2: 0x00167e6d
    frame #3: 0x7510336a
    frame #4: 0x77759882
    frame #5: 0x77759855

After:
  thread #1, stop reason = Exception 0xc0000005 encountered at address 0x164d14
    frame #0: 0x00164d14 C:\Users\amccarth\Documents\Visual Studio 2013\Projects\fizzbuzz\Debug\fizzbuzz.exe
    frame #1: 0x00167c79 C:\Users\amccarth\Documents\Visual Studio 2013\Projects\fizzbuzz\Debug\fizzbuzz.exe
    frame #2: 0x00167e6d C:\Users\amccarth\Documents\Visual Studio 2013\Projects\fizzbuzz\Debug\fizzbuzz.exe
    frame #3: 0x7510336a C:\Windows\SysWOW64\kernel32.dll
    frame #4: 0x77759882 C:\Windows\SysWOW64\ntdll.dll
    frame #5: 0x77759855 C:\Windows\SysWOW64\ntdll.dll

Example: target modules list

Before:
error: the target has no associated executable images

After:
[ 0] C:\Windows\System32\MSVCP120D.dll 
[ 1] C:\Windows\SysWOW64\kernel32.dll 
[ 2] C:\Users\amccarth\Documents\Visual Studio 2013\Projects\fizzbuzz\Debug\fizzbuzz.exe 
[ 3] C:\Windows\System32\MSVCR120D.dll 
[ 4] C:\Windows\SysWOW64\KERNELBASE.dll 
[ 5] C:\Windows\SysWOW64\ntdll.dll

NOTE: the minidump format also includes the debug info GUID, so we can
fill-in the module UUID from it, but this part was excluded from this change
to keep the changes simple (the LLDB UUID is hardcoded to be either 16 or
20 bytes, while the CodeView GUIDs are normally 24 bytes)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45700

llvm-svn: 330302
2018-04-18 23:10:46 +00:00
Pavel Labath
acebc43799 Report more precise error message when attach fails
Summary:
If the remote stub sends a specific error message instead of just a E??
code, we can use this to display a more informative error message
instead of just the generic "unable to attach" message.

I write a test for this using the SB API.
On the console this will show up like:
(lldb) process attach ...
error: attach failed: <STUB-MESSAGE>

if the stub supports error messages, or:
error: attach failed: Error ??

if it doesn't.

Reviewers: jingham, JDevlieghere

Subscribers: lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45573

llvm-svn: 330247
2018-04-18 11:56:21 +00:00
Pavel Labath
145d95c964 Move Args.cpp from Interpreter to Utility
Summary:
The Args class is used in plenty of places besides the command
interpreter (e.g., anything requiring an argc+argv combo, such as when
launching a process), so it needs to be in a lower layer. Now that the
class has no external dependencies, it can be moved down to the Utility
module.

This removes the last (direct) dependency from the Host module to
Interpreter, so I remove the Interpreter module from Host's dependency
list.

Reviewers: zturner, jingham, davide

Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45480

llvm-svn: 330200
2018-04-17 18:53:35 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere
8db3f7ede6 Re-land "Don't assume backing thread shares protocol ID."
When we're dealing with virtual (memory) threads created by the OS
plugins, there's no guarantee that the real thread and the backing
thread share a protocol ID. Instead, we should iterate over the memory
threads to find the virtual thread that is backed by the current real
thread.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45497

rdar://36485830

The original revision (r329891) was reverted because the associated
tests ran into a deadlock on the Linux bots. That problem was resolved
by r330002.

llvm-svn: 330005
2018-04-13 11:31:34 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere
a8d916aad0 Revert "Don't assume backing thread shares protocol ID."
This reverts r329891 because the test case is timing out on linux:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/lldb-x86_64-ubuntu-14.04-cmake/builds/21834

llvm-svn: 329897
2018-04-12 10:51:52 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere
0045c72f9c Don't assume backing thread shares protocol ID.
When we're dealing with virtual (memory) threads created by the OS
plugins, there's no guarantee that the real thread and the backing
thread share a protocol ID. Instead, we should iterate over the memory
threads to find the virtual thread that is backed by the current real
thread.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45497

rdar://36485830

llvm-svn: 329891
2018-04-12 09:58:20 +00:00
Pavel Labath
a70512a958 llgs: Send "rich" errors in response to vAttach packets
There are plenty of ways attaching can go wrong. Having the server
report the exact error means we can give better feedback to the user.
(This patch does not do the second part, it only makes sure the
information is sent from the server.)

Triggering all possible error conditions in a test would prove
challenging, but there is one error that is very easy to reproduce
(attempting to attach while debugging), so I write a test based on that.

The test immediately exposed a bug where the m_send_error_strings field
was being used uninitialized (so it was sometimes true from the get-go),
so I fix that as well.

llvm-svn: 329803
2018-04-11 13:30:54 +00:00
Pavel Labath
47cbf4a07b Move Args::StringTo*** functions to a new OptionArgParser class
Summary:
The idea behind this is to move the functionality which depend on other lldb
classes into a separate class. This way, the Args class can be turned
into a lightweight arc+argv wrapper and moved into the lower lldb
layers.

Reviewers: jingham, zturner

Subscribers: lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44306

llvm-svn: 329677
2018-04-10 09:03:59 +00:00
Pavel Labath
6b3c8bb02e Fix windows build after r329296
Add a couple of #include <csignal>s.

llvm-svn: 329309
2018-04-05 16:23:54 +00:00
Frederic Riss
fa37026db3 Prevent double release of mach ports
Summary:
When a MIG routine returns KERN_FAILURE, the demux function will release any OOL resources like ports. In this case, task_port and thread_port will be released twice, potentially resulting in use after free of the ports.

I don't think we can test this in any useful way
rdar://problem/37331387

Reviewers: jasonmolenda

Subscribers: lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45011

llvm-svn: 328761
2018-03-29 03:49:41 +00:00
Pavel Labath
5a84123490 gdb-remote: Fix checksum verification for messages with escape chars
Summary:
We've had a mismatch in the checksum computation between the sender and
receiver. The sender computed the payload checksum using the wire
encoding of the packet, while the receiver did this after expanding
un-escaping and expanding run-length-encoded sequences. This resulted in
communication breakdown if packets using these feature were sent in the
ack mode.

Normally, this did not cause any issues since the only packet we send in
the ack-mode is the QStartNoAckMode packet, but I ran into this when
debugging the lldb-server tests which (for better or worse) don't use
this mode.

According to the gdb-remote documentation "The two-digit checksum is computed as
the modulo 256 sum of all characters between the leading ‘$’ and the
trailing ‘#’", it seems that our sender is doing the right thing here.
Therefore, I fix the receiver the match the sender behavior and add a
test.

With this bug fixed, we can see that lldb-server is sending a stop-reply
after receiving the "k" in the same way as debugserver does (but we
weren't detecting this because at that point the connection was dead
already). I fix that expectation as well.

Reviewers: clayborg, jasonmolenda

Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44922

llvm-svn: 328693
2018-03-28 10:19:10 +00:00