Enable data formatters to see-through pointers/references to typedefs
For instance, if Foo is a typedef to Bar, and there is a formatter for any/all of Bar*, Bar&, Bar&&, then Foo*, Foo&, and Foo&& should pick these up if Foo-specific formatters don't exist
llvm-svn: 205939
This is a purely mechanical change explicitly casting any parameters for printf
style conversion. This cleans up the warnings emitted by gcc 4.8 on Linux.
llvm-svn: 205607
This is a mechanical cleanup of unused functions. In the case where the
functions are referenced (in comment form), I've simply commented out the
functions. A second pass to clean that up is warranted.
The functions which are otherwise unused have been removed. Some of these were
introduced in the initial commit and not in use prior to that point!
NFC
llvm-svn: 204310
Provide a filter for libc++ std::atomic<T>
This just hides some implementation clutter and promotes the actual content to only child status
llvm-svn: 200984
The "type format add" command gets a new flag --type (-t). If you pass -t <sometype>, upon fetching the value for an object of your type,
LLDB will display it as-if it was of enumeration type <sometype>
This is useful in cases of non-contiguous enums where there are empty gaps of unspecified values, and as such one cannot type their variables as the enum type,
but users would still like to see them as-if they were of the enum type (e.g. DWARF field types with their user-reserved ranges)
The SB API has also been improved to handle both types of formats, and a test case is added
llvm-svn: 198105
So, rename the class for what it truly is: a FormattersContainer
Also do a bunch of related text substitutions in the interest of overall naming clarity
llvm-svn: 197795
Rework data formatters matching algorithm
What happens now is that, for each category, the FormatNavigator generates all possible matches, and checks them one by one
Since the possible matches do not actually depend on the category (whether a match is accepted or not does, but that check can be shifted at a more convenient time),
it is actually feasible to generate every possible match upfront and then let individual categories just scan through those
This commit changes things by introducing a notion of formatters match candidate, and shifting responsibility for generating all of them given a (ValueObject,DynamicValueType) pair
from the FormatNavigator back to the FormatManager
A list of these candidates is then passed down to each category for matching
Candidates also need to remember whether they were generated by stripping pointers, references, typedefs, since this is something that individual formatters can choose to reject
This check, however, is conveniently only done once a "textual" match has been found, so that the list of candidates is truly category-independent
While the performance benefit is small (mostly, due to caching), this is much cleaner from a design perspective
llvm-svn: 195395
User-vended by-type formatters still would prevail on these hardcoded ones
For the time being, while the infrastructure is there, no such formatters exist
This can be useful for cases such as expanding vtables for C++ class pointers, when there is no clear cut notion of a typename matching, and the feature is low-level enough that it makes sense for the debugger core to be vending it
llvm-svn: 193724
Introduce a new boolean setting enable-auto-oneliner
This setting if set to false will force LLDB to not use the new compact one-line display
By default, one-line mode stays on, at least until we can be confident it works.
But now if it seriously impedes your workflow while it evolves/it works wonders but you still hate it, there's a way to turn it off
llvm-svn: 193450
This check was overly strict. Relax it.
While one could conceivably want nested one-lining:
(Foo) aFoo = (x = 1, y = (t = 3, q = “Hello), z = 3.14)
the spirit of this feature is mostly to make *SMALL LINEAR* structs come out more compact.
Aggregates with children and no summary for now just disable the one-lining. Define a one-liner summary to override :)
llvm-svn: 193218
Extend DummySyntheticProvider to actually use debug-info vended children as the source of information
Make Python synthetic children either be valid, or fallback to the dummy, like their C++ counterparts
This allows LLDB to actually stop bailing out upon encountering an invalid synthetic children provider front-end, and still displaying the non synthetized ivar info
llvm-svn: 192741
Formats (as in "type format") are now included in categories
The only bit missing is caching formats along with synthetic children and summaries, which might be now desirable
llvm-svn: 192217
This radar extends the notion of one-liner summaries to automagically apply in a few interesting cases
More specifically, this checkin changes the printout of ValueObjects to print on one-line (as if type summary add -c had been applied) iff:
this ValueObject does not have a summary
its children have no synthetic children
its children are not a non-empty base class without a summary
its children do not have a summary that asks for children to show up
the aggregate length of all the names of all the children is <= 50 characters
you did not ask to see the types during a printout
your pointer depth is 0
This is meant to simplify the way LLDB shows data on screen for small structs and similarly compact data types (e.g. std::pair<int,int> anyone?)
Feedback is especially welcome on how the feature feels and corner cases where we should apply this printout and don't (or viceversa, we are applying it when we shouldn't be)
llvm-svn: 191996
SVN r189964 provided a sample Python script to inspect unordered(multi){set|map} with synthetic children, contribued by Jared Grubb
This checkin converts that sample script to a C++ provider built into LLDB
A test case is also provided
llvm-svn: 190564