Files
clang-p2996/lldb/test/functionalities/command_script/welcome.py
Enrico Granata e87764f247 Add support for custom commands to set flags on themselves
This works for Python commands defined via a class (implement get_flags on your class) and C++ plugin commands (which can call SBCommand::GetFlags()/SetFlags())

Flags allow features such as not letting the command run if there's no target, or if the process is not stopped, ...
Commands could always check for these things themselves, but having these accessible via flags makes custom commands more consistent with built-in ones

llvm-svn: 238286
2015-05-27 05:04:35 +00:00

46 lines
1.5 KiB
Python

import lldb, sys
class WelcomeCommand(object):
def __init__(self, debugger, session_dict):
pass
def get_short_help(self):
return "Just a docstring for welcome_impl\nA command that says hello to LLDB users"
def __call__(self, debugger, args, exe_ctx, result):
print >>result, ('Hello ' + args + ', welcome to LLDB');
return None;
class TargetnameCommand(object):
def __init__(self, debugger, session_dict):
pass
def __call__(self, debugger, args, exe_ctx, result):
target = debugger.GetSelectedTarget()
file = target.GetExecutable()
print >>result, ('Current target ' + file.GetFilename())
if args == 'fail':
result.SetError('a test for error in command')
def get_flags(self):
return lldb.eCommandRequiresTarget
def print_wait_impl(debugger, args, result, dict):
result.SetImmediateOutputFile(sys.stdout)
print >>result, ('Trying to do long task..')
import time
time.sleep(1)
print >>result, ('Still doing long task..')
time.sleep(1)
print >>result, ('Done; if you saw the delays I am doing OK')
def check_for_synchro(debugger, args, result, dict):
if debugger.GetAsync() == True:
print >>result, ('I am running async')
if debugger.GetAsync() == False:
print >>result, ('I am running sync')
def takes_exe_ctx(debugger, args, exe_ctx, result, dict):
print >>result, str(exe_ctx.GetTarget())