Several scripts (two copies of use_lldb_suite.py, and an __init__.py) look for use_lldb_suite_root.py by checking parent directories. If for some reason it doesn't exist, it keeps checking parent directories until it finds it.
However, this only breaks when the parent directory is None, but at least on Linux, dirname('/') == '/', so this will never be None.
This changes the lookup to stop if the dirname(lldb_root) is unchanged. This was previously fixed in 67f6d842fa, but only in one copy of this script.
Additionally, this makes the failure mode more visible -- if the root is not found, it complains loudly instead of silently failing, and having later modules that need lldb_root fail.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83840
Add two modes to the reproducer replay script that make debugging a
little easier. Verbose mode prints stdout and stderr, regardless of
whether replay was successful. When --failure-only is passed, output is
limited to tests that failed to replay.
All the code required to generate the language bindings for Python and
Lua lives under scripts, even though the majority of this code aren't
scripts at all, and surrounded by scripts that are totally unrelated.
I've reorganized these files and moved everything related to the
language bindings into a new top-level directory named bindings. This
makes the corresponding files self contained and much more discoverable.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72437
Making the string conversion operator a macro unintentionally dropped
the backslash before '\n' and '\r' and was therefore incorrectly
stripping 'n' and 'r' from the object description.
The current SWIG extensions for the string conversion operator is Python
specific because it uses the PythonObjects. This means that the code
cannot be reused for other SWIG supported languages such as Lua.
This reimplements the extensions in a more generic way that can be
reused. It uses a SWIG macro to reduce code duplication.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72377
The current SWIG extensions for the string conversion operator is Python
specific because it uses the PythonObjects. This means that the code
cannot be reused for other SWIG supported languages such as Lua.
This reimplements the extensions in a more generic way that can be
reused. It uses a SWIG macro to reduce code duplication.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72377
The current SWIG extensions for the string conversion operator is Python
specific because it uses the PythonObjects. This means that the code
cannot be reused for other SWIG supported languages such as Lua.
This reimplements the extensions in a more generic way that can be
reused.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72377
As correctly pointed out by Martin on the mailing list, Python should
only be auto-enabled if SWIG is found as well. This moves the logic of
finding SWIG into FindPythonInterpAndLibs to make that possible.
To make diagnosing easier I've included a status message to convey why
Python support is disabled.
This was returning a pointer to a stack-allocated memory location. This
works for Python where we return a PythonString which must own the
underlying string.
Extend the SBTarget class with a string conversion operator and reuse
the same code between Python and Lua. This should happen for all the SB
classes, but I'm doing just this one as an example and for use in a test
case.
Extend the SBTarget class with a string conversion operator and reuse
the same code between Python and Lua. This should happen for all the SB
classes, but I'm doing just this one as an example and for use in a test
case.
This is a half-implemented feature that as far as we can tell was
never used by anything since its original inclusion in 2014. This
patch removes it to make remaining the code easier to understand.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71310