Commit Graph

42 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Greg Clayton 2ed751bd47 Changed the emulate instruction function to take emulate options which
are defined as enumerations. Current bits include:

        eEmulateInstructionOptionAutoAdvancePC
        eEmulateInstructionOptionIgnoreConditions

Modified the EmulateInstruction class to have a few more pure virtuals that
can help clients understand how many instructions the emulator can handle:

        virtual bool
        SupportsEmulatingIntructionsOfType (InstructionType inst_type) = 0;


Where instruction types are defined as:

//------------------------------------------------------------------
/// Instruction types
//------------------------------------------------------------------    
typedef enum InstructionType
{
    eInstructionTypeAny,                // Support for any instructions at all (at least one)
    eInstructionTypePrologueEpilogue,   // All prologue and epilogue instructons that push and pop register values and modify sp/fp
    eInstructionTypePCModifying,        // Any instruction that modifies the program counter/instruction pointer
    eInstructionTypeAll                 // All instructions of any kind

}  InstructionType;


This allows use to tell what an emulator can do and also allows us to request
these abilities when we are finding the plug-in interface.

Added the ability for an EmulateInstruction class to get the register names
for any registers that are part of the emulation. This helps with being able
to dump and log effectively.

The UnwindAssembly class now stores the architecture it was created with in
case it is needed later in the unwinding process.

Added a function that can tell us DWARF register names for ARM that goes
along with the source/Utility/ARM_DWARF_Registers.h file: 

        source/Utility/ARM_DWARF_Registers.c
        
Took some of plug-ins out of the lldb_private namespace.

llvm-svn: 130189
2011-04-26 04:39:08 +00:00
Greg Clayton 078daac55d Even more renaming.
llvm-svn: 130155
2011-04-25 21:07:40 +00:00
Greg Clayton ffc922e389 More moving things around for the unwind plan and assembly unwind plug-ins.
llvm-svn: 130154
2011-04-25 21:05:07 +00:00
Greg Clayton dc5eb693bd Put plug-ins into the correct directories as they were incorrectly located
in a Utility directory.

llvm-svn: 130135
2011-04-25 18:36:36 +00:00
Caroline Tice ad379efc86 Add the rest of the mechanisms to make ARM instruction emulation usable/possible.
llvm-svn: 128907
2011-04-05 18:46:00 +00:00
Greg Clayton e0d378b334 Fixed the LLDB build so that we can have private types, private enums and
public types and public enums. This was done to keep the SWIG stuff from
parsing all sorts of enums and types that weren't needed, and allows us to
abstract our API better.

llvm-svn: 128239
2011-03-24 21:19:54 +00:00
Greg Clayton 1cb6496eb0 Did a lot more work on abtracting and organizing the platforms.
On Mac OS X we now have 3 platforms:
PlatformDarwin - must be subclassed to fill in the missing pure virtual funcs
                 but this implements all the common functionality between
                 remote-macosx and remote-ios. It also allows for another
                 platform to be used (remote-gdb-server for now) when doing
                 remote connections. Keeping this pluggable will allow for
                 flexibility.
PlatformMacOSX - Now implements both local and remote macosx desktop platforms.
PlatformRemoteiOS - Remote only iOS that knows how to locate SDK files in the
                    cached SDK locations on the host.

A new agnostic platform has been created:
PlatformRemoteGDBServer - this implements the platform using the GDB remote 
                          protocol and uses the built in lldb_private::Host
                          static functions to implement many queries.

llvm-svn: 128193
2011-03-24 04:28:38 +00:00
Greg Clayton fc36f79170 Abtracted the innards of lldb-core away from the SB interface. There was some
overlap in the SWIG integration which has now been fixed by introducing
callbacks for initializing SWIG for each language (python only right now).
There was also a breakpoint command callback that called into SWIG which has
been abtracted into a callback to avoid cross over as well.

Added a new binary: lldb-platform

This will be the start of the remote platform that will use as much of the 
Host functionality to do its job so it should just work on all platforms.
It is pretty hollowed out for now, but soon it will implement a platform
using the GDB remote packets as the transport.

llvm-svn: 128053
2011-03-22 01:14:58 +00:00
Greg Clayton ded470d31a Added more platform support. There are now some new commands:
platform status -- gets status information for the selected platform
platform create <platform-name> -- creates a new instance of a remote platform
platform list -- list all available platforms
platform select -- select a platform instance as the current platform (not working yet)

When using "platform create" it will create a remote platform and make it the
selected platform. For instances for iPhone OS debugging on Mac OS X one can 
do:

(lldb) platform create remote-ios --sdk-version=4.0
Remote platform: iOS platform
SDK version: 4.0
SDK path: "/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/DeviceSupport/4.0"
Not connected to a remote device.
(lldb) file ~/Documents/a.out
Current executable set to '~/Documents/a.out' (armv6).
(lldb) image list
[  0] /Volumes/work/gclayton/Documents/devb/attach/a.out
[  1] /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/DeviceSupport/4.0/Symbols/usr/lib/dyld
[  2] /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/DeviceSupport/4.0/Symbols/usr/lib/libSystem.B.dylib


Note that this is all happening prior to running _or_ connecting to a remote
platform. Once connected to a remote platform the OS version might change which
means we will need to update our dependecies. Also once we run, we will need
to match up the actualy binaries with the actualy UUID's to files in the
SDK, or download and cache them locally.

This is just the start of the remote platforms, but this modification is the
first iteration in getting the platforms really doing something.

llvm-svn: 127934
2011-03-19 01:12:21 +00:00
Stephen Wilson 28c16d9a7e Add a missing include.
This change is needed to fix the build on Linux. 

llvm-svn: 127557
2011-03-13 00:00:32 +00:00
Caroline Tice 20bd37f747 The UserSettings controllers must be initialized & terminated in the
correct order.  Previously this was tacitly implemented but not
enforced, so it was possible to accidentally do things in the wrong
order and cause problems.  This fixes that problem.

llvm-svn: 127430
2011-03-10 22:14:10 +00:00
Stephen Wilson 1636265248 Add Makefile support for the Platform plugins.
This patch supports building the Linux platform plugin, and should also support
the MacOSX plugin as well (the MacOSX side has not been tested, unfortunately).
A small typo was corrected in lldb.cpp to initialize the new platform code on
Linux.

llvm-svn: 127393
2011-03-10 03:08:28 +00:00
Greg Clayton e996fd30be LLDB now has "Platform" plug-ins. Platform plug-ins are plug-ins that provide
an interface to a local or remote debugging platform. By default each host OS
that supports LLDB should be registering a "default" platform that will be
used unless a new platform is selected. Platforms are responsible for things
such as:
- getting process information by name or by processs ID
- finding platform files. This is useful for remote debugging where there is 
  an SDK with files that might already or need to be cached for debug access.
- getting a list of platform supported architectures in the exact order they
  should be selected. This helps the native x86 platform on MacOSX select the
  correct x86_64/i386 slice from universal binaries.
- Connect to remote platforms for remote debugging
- Resolving an executable including finding an executable inside platform
  specific bundles (macosx uses .app bundles that contain files) and also
  selecting the appropriate slice of universal files for a given platform.

So by default there is always a local platform, but remote platforms can be
connected to. I will soon be adding a new "platform" command that will support
the following commands:
(lldb) platform connect --name machine1 macosx connect://host:port
Connected to "machine1" platform.
(lldb) platform disconnect macosx

This allows LLDB to be well setup to do remote debugging and also once 
connected process listing and finding for things like:
(lldb) process attach --name x<TAB>

The currently selected platform plug-in can now auto complete any available
processes that start with "x". The responsibilities for the platform plug-in
will soon grow and expand.

llvm-svn: 127286
2011-03-08 22:40:15 +00:00
Greg Clayton fc7117ae93 Added a DynamicLoaderStatic plug-in that will act as a static dynamic loader.
It will just load all files exactly where the files state they are (file
addresses == load addresses). This is used when the llvm::Triple::OSType is
set to llvm::Triple::UnknownOS or llvm::Triple::NoOS.

llvm-svn: 127053
2011-03-05 01:04:56 +00:00
Greg Clayton bfe5f3bf06 Added new target instance settings for execution settings:
Targets can now specify some additional parameters for when we debug 
executables that can help with plug-in selection:

target.execution-level = auto | user | kernel
target.execution-mode  = auto | dynamic | static
target.execution-os-type = auto | none | halted | live

On some systems, the binaries that are created are the same wether you use
them to debug a kernel, or a user space program. Many times inspecting an 
object file can reveal what an executable should be. For these cases we can
now be a little more complete by specifying wether to detect all of these
things automatically (inspect the main executable file and select a plug-in
accordingly), or manually to force the selection of certain plug-ins.

To do this we now allow the specficifation of wether one is debugging a user
space program (target.execution-level = user) or a kernel program 
(target.execution-level = kernel).

We can also specify if we want to debug a program where shared libraries
are dynamically loaded using a DynamicLoader plug-in 
(target.execution-mode = dynamic), or wether we will treat all symbol files
as already linked at the correct address (target.execution-mode = static).

We can also specify if the inferior we are debugging is being debugged on 
a bare board (target.execution-os-type = none), or debugging an OS where
we have a JTAG or other direct connection to the inferior stops the entire
OS (target.execution-os-type = halted), or if we are debugging a program on
something that has live debug services (target.execution-os-type = live).

For the "target.execution-os-type = halted" mode, we will need to create 
ProcessHelper plug-ins that allow us to extract the process/thread and other
OS information by reading/writing memory.

This should allow LLDB to be used for a wide variety of debugging tasks and
handle them all correctly.

llvm-svn: 125815
2011-02-18 01:44:25 +00:00
Greg Clayton e576ab2996 All UnwindPlan objects are now passed around as shared pointers.
ArchDefaultUnwindPlan plug-in interfaces are now cached per architecture 
instead of being leaked for every frame.

Split the ArchDefaultUnwindPlan_x86 into ArchDefaultUnwindPlan_x86_64 and
ArchDefaultUnwindPlan_i386 interfaces.

There were sporadic crashes that were due to something leaking or being 
destroyed when doing stack crawls. This patch should clear up these issues.

llvm-svn: 125541
2011-02-15 00:19:15 +00:00
Greg Clayton 4272cc7d4c Modified the PluginManager to be ready for loading plug-ins from a system
LLDB plugin directory and a user LLDB plugin directory. We currently still
need to work out at what layer the plug-ins will be, but at least we are 
prepared for plug-ins. Plug-ins will attempt to be loaded from the 
"/Developer/Library/PrivateFrameworks/LLDB.framework/Resources/Plugins" 
folder, and from the "~/Library/Application Support/LLDB/Plugins" folder on
MacOSX. Each plugin will be scanned for:

extern "C" bool LLDBPluginInitialize(void);
extern "C" void LLDBPluginTerminate(void);

If at least LLDBPluginInitialize is found, the plug-in will be loaded. The
LLDBPluginInitialize function returns a bool that indicates if the plug-in
should stay loaded or not (plug-ins might check the current OS, current
hardware, or anything else and determine they don't want to run on the current
host). The plug-in is uniqued by path and added to a static loaded plug-in
map. The plug-in scanning happens during "lldb_private::Initialize()" which
calls to the PluginManager::Initialize() function. Likewise with termination
lldb_private::Terminate() calls PluginManager::Terminate(). The paths for the
plug-in directories is fetched through new Host calls:

    bool Host::GetLLDBPath (ePathTypeLLDBSystemPlugins, dir_spec);
    bool Host::GetLLDBPath (ePathTypeLLDBUserPlugins, dir_spec);

This way linux and other systems can define their own appropriate locations
for plug-ins to be loaded.

To allow dynamic shared library loading, the Host layer has also been modified
to include shared library open, close and get symbol:

    static void *
    Host::DynamicLibraryOpen (const FileSpec &file_spec, 
                              Error &error);

    static Error
    Host::DynamicLibraryClose (void *dynamic_library_handle);

    static void *
    Host::DynamicLibraryGetSymbol (void *dynamic_library_handle, 
                                  const char *symbol_name, 
                                  Error &error);

lldb_private::FileSpec also has been modified to support directory enumeration
in an attempt to abstract the directory enumeration into one spot in the code.
The directory enumertion function is static and takes a callback:


    typedef enum EnumerateDirectoryResult
    {
        eEnumerateDirectoryResultNext,  // Enumerate next entry in the current directory
        eEnumerateDirectoryResultEnter, // Recurse into the current entry if it is a directory or symlink, or next if not
        eEnumerateDirectoryResultExit,  // Exit from the current directory at the current level.
        eEnumerateDirectoryResultQuit   // Stop directory enumerations at any level
    };

    typedef FileSpec::EnumerateDirectoryResult (*EnumerateDirectoryCallbackType) (void *baton,
                                                                                  FileSpec::FileType file_type,
                                                                                  const FileSpec &spec);

    static FileSpec::EnumerateDirectoryResult
    FileSpec::EnumerateDirectory (const char *dir_path,
                                  bool find_directories,
                                  bool find_files,
                                  bool find_other,
                                  EnumerateDirectoryCallbackType callback,
                                  void *callback_baton);

This allow clients to specify the directory to search, and specifies if only
files, directories or other (pipe, symlink, fifo, etc) files will cause the
callback to be called. The callback also gets to return with the action that
should be performed after this directory entry. eEnumerateDirectoryResultNext
specifies to continue enumerating through a directory with the next entry.
eEnumerateDirectoryResultEnter specifies to recurse down into a directory
entry, or if the file is not a directory or symlink/alias to a directory, then
just iterate to the next entry. eEnumerateDirectoryResultExit specifies to 
exit the current directory and skip any entries that might be remaining, yet
continue enumerating to the next entry in the parent directory. And finally
eEnumerateDirectoryResultQuit means to abort all directory enumerations at 
all levels.

Modified the Declaration class to not include column information currently
since we don't have any compilers that currently support column based 
declaration information. Columns support can be re-enabled with the
additions of a #define.

Added the ability to find an EmulateInstruction plug-in given a target triple
and optional plug-in name in the plug-in manager.

Fixed a few cases where opendir/readdir was being used, but yet not closedir
was being used. Soon these will be deprecated in favor of the new directory
enumeration call that was added to the FileSpec class.

llvm-svn: 124716
2011-02-02 02:24:04 +00:00
Stephen Wilson 2103e25e19 Initial support for a DynamicLoader plugin on Linux.
This patch is enough to have shared objects recognized by LLDB.  We can handle
position independent executables.  We can handle dynamically loaded modules
brought in via dlopen.

The DYLDRendezvous class provides an interface to a structure present in the
address space of ELF-based processes.  This structure provides the address of a
function which is called by the linker each time a shared object is loaded and
unloaded (thus a breakpoint at that address will let LLDB intercept such
events), a list of entries describing the currently loaded shared objects, plus
a few other things.

On Linux, processes are brought up with an auxiliary vector on the stack.  One
element in this vector contains the (possibly dynamic) entry address of the
process.  One does not need to walk the stack to find this information as it is
also available under /proc/<pid>/auxv.  The new AuxVector class provides a
convenient read-only view of this auxiliary vector information.  We use the
dynamic entry address and the address as specified in the object file to compute
the actual load address of the inferior image.  This strategy works for both
normal executables and PIE's.

llvm-svn: 123592
2011-01-16 19:45:39 +00:00
Caroline Tice 2f88aadff1 Split up the Python script interpreter code to allow multiple script interpreter objects to
exist within the same process (one script interpreter object per debugger object).  The
python script interpreter objects are all using the same global Python script interpreter;
they use separate dictionaries to keep their data separate, and mutex's to prevent any object
attempting to use the global Python interpreter when another object is already using it.

llvm-svn: 123415
2011-01-14 00:29:16 +00:00
Stephen Wilson c2204398e0 Initialize SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap on Apple platforms only.
SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap handles the parsing of OSO stabs which are effectively a
Mach-O specific feature and is incompatible with other object file formats.

llvm-svn: 123308
2011-01-12 04:22:09 +00:00
Greg Clayton 3c310a1a79 Fixes for linux building from Stephen Wilson.
llvm-svn: 122002
2010-12-16 21:36:30 +00:00
Greg Clayton ce6d19a732 Fixes for linux building from Stephen Wilson.
llvm-svn: 122001
2010-12-16 21:33:41 +00:00
Greg Clayton 99d0faf27e Cleaned up code that wasn't using the Initialize and Terminate paradigm by
changing it to use it. There was an extra parameter added to the static
accessor global user settings controllers that wasn't needed. A bool was being
used as a parameter to the accessor just so it could be used to clean up 
the global user settings controller which is now fixed by splitting up the
initialization into the "static void Class::Initialize()", access into the
"static UserSettingsControllerSP & Class::GetSettingsController()", and
cleanup into "static void Class::Terminate()".

Also added initialize and terminate calls to the logging code to avoid issues
when LLDB is shutting down. There were cases after the logging was switched
over to use shared pointers where we could crash if the global destructor
chain was being run and it causes the log to be destroyed and any any logging
occurred.

llvm-svn: 119757
2010-11-18 23:32:35 +00:00
Jim Ingham 2a5e0f03fb Add a ObjC V1 runtime, and a generic AppleObjCRuntime plugin.
Also move the Checker creation into the Apple Runtime code.

llvm-svn: 118255
2010-11-04 18:30:59 +00:00
Jason Molenda ab4f1924db Check in the native lldb unwinder.
Not yet enabled as the default unwinder but there are no known
backtrace problems with the code at this point.

Added 'log enable lldb unwind' to help diagnose backtrace problems;
this output needs a little refining but it's a good first step.

eh_frame information is currently read unconditionally - the code
is structured to allow this to be delayed until it's actually needed.
There is a performance hit when you have to parse the eh_frame
information for any largeish executable/library so it's necessary
to avoid if possible.

It's confusing having both the UnwindPlan::RegisterLocation struct
and the RegisterConextLLDB::RegisterLocation struct, I need to rename
one of them.

The writing of registers isn't done in the RegisterConextLLDB subclass
yet; neither is the running of complex DWARF expressions from eh_frame
(e.g. used for _sigtramp on Mac OS X).

llvm-svn: 117256
2010-10-25 11:12:07 +00:00