CFLAGS is now being set correctly to pass -flimit-debug-info or
-fno-limit-debug-info on FreeBSD. I'm not sure which change is
responsible for the fix, though.
llvm.org/pr25626
llvm-svn: 260330
This removes the following decorators:
* skipIfI386
* expectedFailureI386
* expectedFailurex86_64
* skipIfArch
* skipUnlessArch
* skipUnlessI386
And other related decorators. All code using those decorators
is updated to use expectedFailureAll and skipIf
llvm-svn: 260178
* Change the `not_in` function to be called `no_match`. This makes
it clear that keyword arguments can be more than just lists.
* Change the name of `_check_list_or_lambda` to
`_match_decorator_property`. Again clarifying that decorator params
are not always lists.
* Always use a regex match when matching strings. This allows automatic
support for regex matching on all decorator properties. Also support
compiled regex values.
* Fix a bug in the compiler check used by _decorateTest. The two
arguments were reversed, the condition was always wrong.
* Change one test that uses skipUnlessArch to use skipIf, to
demonstrate that skipIf can now handle more scenarios.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16938
llvm-svn: 260135
expectedFailureWindows is equivalent to using the general
expectedFailureAll decorator with oslist="windows". Additionally,
by moving towards these common decorators we can solve the issue
of having to support decorators that can be called with or without
arguments. Once all decorators are always called with arguments,
and this is enforced by design (because you can't specify the condition
you're decorating for without passing an argument) the implementation
of the decorators can become much simpler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16936
llvm-svn: 260134
Summary:
This reverts commit 8af14b5f9af68c31ac80945e5b5d56f0a14b38e4.
Reverting as it breaks a few tests on Mac.
Reviewers: spyffe
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16895
llvm-svn: 259823
Summary:
While evaluating expressions when stopped in a class method, there was a
problem of member variables hiding local variables. This was happening
because, in the context of a method, clang already knew about member
variables with their name and assumed that they were the only variables
with those names in scope. Consequently, clang never checks with LLDB
about the possibility of local variables with the same name and goes
wrong. This change addresses the problem by using an artificial
namespace "$__lldb_local_vars". All local variables in scope are
declared in the "$__lldb_expr" method as follows:
using $__lldb_local_vars::<local var 1>;
using $__lldb_local_vars::<local var 2>;
...
This hides the member variables with the same name and forces clang to
enquire about the variables which it thinks are declared in
$__lldb_local_vars. When LLDB notices that clang is enquiring about
variables in $__lldb_local_vars, it looks up local vars and conveys
their information if found. This way, member variables do not hide local
variables, leading to correct evaluation of expressions.
A point to keep in mind is that the above solution does not solve the
problem for one specific case:
namespace N
{
int a;
}
class A
{
public:
void Method();
int a;
};
void
A::Method()
{
using N::a;
...
// Since the above solution only touches locals, it does not
// force clang to enquire about "a" coming from namespace N.
}
Reviewers: clayborg, spyffe
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16746
llvm-svn: 259810
This doesn't attempt to move every decorator. The reason for
this is that it requires touching every single test file to import
decorators.py. I would like to do this in a followup patch, but
in the interest of keeping the patches as bite-sized as possible,
I've only attempted to move the underlying common decorators first.
A few tests call these directly, so those tests are updated as part
of this patch.
llvm-svn: 259807
This patch attempts to solve the Python 2 / Python 3 incompatibilities by
introducing a new `encoded_file` abstraction that we use instead of
`io.open()`. The problem with the builtin implementation of `io.open` is
that `read` and `write` accept and return `unicode` objects, which are not
always convenient to work with in Python 2. We solve this by making
`encoded_file.open()` return the same object returned by `io.open()` but
with hooked `read()` and `write()` methods. These hooked methods will
accept binary or text data, and conditionally convert what it gets to a
`unicode` object using the correct encoding. When calling `read()` it
also does any conversion necessary to convert the output back into the
native `string` type of the running python version.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16736
llvm-svn: 259379
Instead of opening the file in unicode mode, we need only encode
data which potentially has non-ASCII characters as UTF8 before
writing. This should work across both Python versions, and is
also far simpler than anything else discussed.
llvm-svn: 258969
Previously we were writing in the default encoding, which depends
on the operating system and is not guaranteed to be unicode aware.
On Python 3, this would lead to a situation where writing unicode
text to the log file generates an exception. The fix here is to
write session logs using the proper encoding, which incidentally
fixes another test, so xfail is removed from that.
llvm-svn: 258759
This is hitting an assert in clang when evaluating the
module load. I am seeing it locally on Xcode 7.3 public Beta 1
and on the llvm.org Green Dragon buildbot supposedly running
Xcode 7.0.
Tracked by:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=26267
llvm-svn: 258602
Starting with Windows 10, the Windows loader is itself multi-threaded,
meaning that the loader spins up a few threads to do process
initialization before it executes main. Windows delivers these
notifications asynchronously and they can come out of order, so
we can't be sure that the first thread we get a notification about
is actually the zero'th thread.
This patch fixes this by requesting the thread stopped at the
breakpoint that was specified, rather than getting thread 0 and
verifying that it is stopped at a breakpoint.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16247
llvm-svn: 258432
Summary: Also xfailed for GCC as there is an problem with debug info generation.
Reviewers: granata.enrico
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15657
llvm-svn: 256067
This patch adds support for printing global static const variables which are given a DW_AT_const_value DWARF tag by clang.
Fix for bug https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25653
Reviewers: clayborg, tberghammer
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15576
llvm-svn: 255887
When multiple functions are found by name, lldb removes duplicate entries of
functions with the same type, so the first function in the symbol context list
is chosen, even if it isn't in scope. This patch uses the declaration context
of the execution context to select the function which is in scope.
This fixes cases like the following:
int func();
namespace ns {
int func();
void here() {
// Run to BP here and eval 'p func()';
// lldb used to find ::func(), now finds ns::func().
}
}
Reviewed by: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15312
llvm-svn: 255439
It was previously reverted due to issues that showed up only on linux. I was able to reproduce these issues and fix the underlying cause.
So this is the same patch as 254476 with the following two fixes:
- Fix not trying to complete classes that don't have external sources
- Fix ClangASTSource::CompleteType() to check the decl context of types that it finds by basename to ensure we don't complete a type "S" with a type like "std::S". Before this fix ClangASTSource::CompleteType() would accept _any_ type that had a matching basename and copy it into the other type.
<rdar://problem/22992457>
llvm-svn: 254980
Patch by Nitesh Jain.
Summary: There is no debug information generated for variable index with –O3 optimization flag. The DW_AT_location tag in DWARF debug_info section is empty.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan, jaydeep
Differential: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15224
llvm-svn: 254850
This is done by finding the types that are forward declarations that come from a module, and loading that module's debug info in a separate lldb_private::Module, and copying the type over into the current module using a ClangASTImporter object. ClangASTImporter objects are already used to copy types from on clang::ASTContext to another for expressions so the type copying code has been around for a while.
A new FindTypes variant was added to SymbolVendor and SymbolFile:
size_t
SymbolVendor::FindTypes (const std::vector<CompilerContext> &context, bool append, TypeMap& types);
size_t
SymbolVendor::FindTypes (const std::vector<CompilerContext> &context, bool append, TypeMap& types);
The CompilerContext is a way to represent the exact context of a type and pass it through an agnostic API boundary so that we can find that exact context elsewhere in another file. This was required here because we can have a module that has submodules, both of which have a "foo" type.
I am not able to add tests for this yet as we currently don't build our C/C++/ObjC binaries with the clang binary that we build. There are some driver issues where it can't find the header files for the C and C++ standard library which makes compiling these tests hard. We can't also guarantee that if we are building with clang that it supporst the exact format of -gmodule debugging that we are trying to test. We have had other versions of clang that had a different implementation of -gmodule debugging that we are no longer supporting, so we can't enable tests if we are building with clang without compiling something and looking at the structure of the DWARF that was generated to ensure that it is the format we can actually use.
llvm-svn: 254476
This patch fixes two issues:
1) Popen needs to be used with universal_newlines=True by default.
This elicits automatic decoding from bytes -> string in Py3,
and has no negative effects in other Py versions.
2) The swig typemaps for converting between string and (char*, int)
did not work correctly when the length of the string was 0,
indicating an error. In this case we would try to construct a
string from uninitialized data.
3) Ironically, the bug mentioned in #2 led to a test passing on
Windows that was actually broken, because the test was written
such that the assertion was never even getting checked, so it
passed by default. So we additionally fix this test to also
fail if the method errors. By fixing this test it's now broken
on Windows, so we also xfail it.
llvm-svn: 253487