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* [NativePDB] Fix setting breakpoint by file and line.Zachary Turner2019-01-021-63/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | There were several problems preventing this from working. The first is that when the PDB had an absolute path to the main source file, we would construct an invalid path by prepending the compilation directory to it anyway. So we needed to check if the path is already absolute first. Second, LLDB assumes that the zero'th item in the support file list is the main compilation unit. We were respecting this requirement, but LLDB *also* requires that file to appear somewhere in the list starting from index 1 as well. So the main compilation file should appear in the support file list twice. And when parsing a line table, it expects the LineEntry records to be constructed using the 1-based index. With these two fixes we can now set breakpoints by file and line using the native PDB reader. llvm-svn: 350240
* [lit] Add a generic build script with a lit substitution.Zachary Turner2018-12-011-9/+8
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This adds a script called build.py as well as a lit substitution called %build that we can use to invoke it. The idea is that this allows a lit test to build test inferiors without having to worry about architecture / platform specific differences, command line syntax, finding / configurationg a proper toolchain, and other issues. They can simply write something like: %build --arch=32 -o %t.exe %p/Inputs/foo.cpp and it will just work. This paves the way for being able to run lit tests with multiple configurations, platforms, and compilers with a single test. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54914 llvm-svn: 348058
* Fix some issues with LLDB's lit configuration files.Zachary Turner2018-11-191-2/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Recently I tried to port LLDB's lit configuration files over to use a on the surface, but broke some cases that weren't broken before and also exposed some additional problems with the old approach that we were just getting lucky with. When we set up a lit environment, the goal is to make it as hermetic as possible. We should not be relying on PATH and enabling the use of arbitrary shell commands. Instead, only whitelisted commands should be allowed. These are, generally speaking, the lit builtins such as echo, cd, etc, as well as anything for which substitutions have been explicitly set up for. These substitutions should map to the build output directory, but in some cases it's useful to be able to override this (for example to point to an installed tools directory). This is, of course, how it's supposed to work. What was actually happening is that we were bringing in PATH and LD_LIBRARY_PATH and then just running the given run line as a shell command. This led to problems such as finding the wrong version of clang-cl on PATH since it wasn't even a substitution, and flakiness / non-determinism since the environment the tests were running in would change per-machine. On the other hand, it also made other things possible. For example, we had some tests that were explicitly running cl.exe and link.exe instead of clang-cl and lld-link and the only reason it worked at all is because it was finding them on PATH. Unfortunately we can't entirely get rid of these tests, because they support a few things in debug info that clang-cl and lld-link don't (notably, the LF_UDT_MOD_SRC_LINE record which makes some of the tests fail. The high level changes introduced in this patch are: 1. Removal of functionality - The lit test suite no longer respects LLDB_TEST_C_COMPILER and LLDB_TEST_CXX_COMPILER. This means there is no more support for gcc, but nobody was using this anyway (note: The functionality is still there for the dotest suite, just not the lit test suite). There is no longer a single substitution %cxx and %cc which maps to <arbitrary-compiler>, you now explicitly specify the compiler with a substitution like %clang or %clangxx or %clang_cl. We can revisit this in the future when someone needs gcc. 2. Introduction of the LLDB_LIT_TOOLS_DIR directory. This does in spirit what LLDB_TEST_C_COMPILER and LLDB_TEST_CXX_COMPILER used to do, but now more friendly. If this is not specified, all tools are expected to be the just-built tools. If it is specified, the tools which are not themselves being tested but are being used to construct and run checks (e.g. clang, FileCheck, llvm-mc, etc) will be searched for in this directory first, then the build output directory. 3. Changes to core llvm lit files. The use_lld() and use_clang() functions were introduced long ago in anticipation of using them in lldb, but since they were never actually used anywhere but their respective problems, there were some issues to be resolved regarding generality and ability to use them outside their project. 4. Changes to .test files - These are all just replacing things like clang-cl with %clang_cl and %cxx with %clangxx, etc. 5. Changes to lit.cfg.py - Previously we would load up some system environment variables and then add some new things to them. Then do a bunch of work building out our own substitutions. First, we delete the system environment variable code, making the environment hermetic. Then, we refactor the substitution logic into two separate helper functions, one which sets up substitutions for the tools we want to test (which must come from the build output directory), and another which sets up substitutions for support tools (like compilers, etc). 6. New substitutions for MSVC -- Previously we relied on location of MSVC by bringing in the entire parent's PATH and letting subprocess.Popen just run the command line. Now we set up real substitutions that should have the same effect. We use PATH to find them, and then look for INCLUDE and LIB to construct a substitution command line with appropriate /I and /LIBPATH: arguments. The nice thing about this is that it opens the door to having separate %msvc-cl32 and %msvc-cl64 substitutions, rather than only requiring the user to run vcvars first. Because we can deduce the path to 32-bit libraries from 64-bit library directories, and vice versa. Without these substitutions this would have been impossible. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54567 llvm-svn: 347216
* [NativePDB] Make tests work on x86 tooAleksandr Urakov2018-11-021-7/+7
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Summary: This patch fixes the NativePDB tests to make them work from x86 command line too Reviewers: zturner, stella.stamenova Subscribers: aleksandr.urakov, teemperor, lldb-commits Tags: #lldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54031 llvm-svn: 345974
* Add REQUIRES: lld to SymbolFileNativePDB tests.Zachary Turner2018-10-121-7/+8
| | | | llvm-svn: 344431
* Try to fix some failures on MacOSX with the NativePDB patch.Zachary Turner2018-10-121-2/+2
| | | | | | | | | | This adds -- before any filenames, so that /U doesn't get interpreted as a command line. It also adds better error checking, so that we don't get assertions on the failure path when a file fails to parse as a PDB. llvm-svn: 344429
* Resubmit "Add SymbolFileNativePDB plugin."Zachary Turner2018-10-121-0/+63
| | | | | | | | | | This was originally reverted due to some test failures on Linux. Those problems turned out to require several additional patches to lld and clang in order to fix, which have since been submitted. This patch is resubmitted unchanged. All tests now pass on both Linux and Windows. llvm-svn: 344409
* Revert SymbolFileNativePDB plugin.Zachary Turner2018-10-111-63/+0
| | | | | | | | | This was originally causing some test failures on non-Windows platforms, which required fixes in the compiler and linker. After those fixes, however, other tests started failing. Reverting temporarily until I can address everything. llvm-svn: 344279
* Create a SymbolFile plugin for cross-platform PDB access.Zachary Turner2018-10-101-0/+63
The existing SymbolFilePDB only works on Windows, as it is written against a closed-source Microsoft SDK that ships with their debugging tools. There are several reasons we want to bypass this and go straight to the bits of the PDB, but just to list a few: More room for optimization. We can't see inside the implementation of the Microsoft SDK, so we don't always know if we're doing things in the most efficient way possible. For example, setting a breakpoint on main of a big program currently takes several seconds. With the implementation here, the time is unnoticeable. We want to be able to symbolize Windows minidumps even if not on Windows. Someone should be able to debug Windows minidumps as if they were on Windows, given that no running process is necessary. This patch is a very crude first attempt at filling out some of the basic pieces. I've implemented FindFunctions, ParseCompileUnitLineTable, and ResolveSymbolContext for a limited subset of possible parameter values, which is just enough to get it to display something nice for the breakpoint location. I've added several tests exercising this functionality which are limited enough to work on all platforms but still exercise this functionality. I'll try to add as many tests of this nature as I can, but at some point we'll need a live process. For now, this plugin is enabled always on non-Windows, and by setting the environment variable LLDB_USE_NATIVE_PDB_READER=1 on Windows. Eventually, once it's at parity with the Windows implementation, we'll delete the Windows DIA-based implementation. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53002 llvm-svn: 344154
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