also consider whether any of the parameter types (as written, prior to
decay) are dependent. Fixes PR9880 and <rdar://problem/9408413>.
llvm-svn: 131099
into some cleanup I have been wanting to do when reading/writing registers.
Previously all RegisterContext subclasses would need to implement:
virtual bool
ReadRegisterBytes (uint32_t reg, DataExtractor &data);
virtual bool
WriteRegisterBytes (uint32_t reg, DataExtractor &data, uint32_t data_offset = 0);
There is now a new class specifically designed to hold register values:
lldb_private::RegisterValue
The new register context calls that subclasses must implement are:
virtual bool
ReadRegister (const RegisterInfo *reg_info, RegisterValue ®_value) = 0;
virtual bool
WriteRegister (const RegisterInfo *reg_info, const RegisterValue ®_value) = 0;
The RegisterValue class must be big enough to handle any register value. The
class contains an enumeration for the value type, and then a union for the
data value. Any integer/float values are stored directly in an appropriate
host integer/float. Anything bigger is stored in a byte buffer that has a length
and byte order. The RegisterValue class also knows how to copy register value
bytes into in a buffer with a specified byte order which can be used to write
the register value down into memory, and this does the right thing when not
all bytes from the register values are needed (getting a uint8 from a uint32
register value..).
All RegiterContext and other sources have been switched over to using the new
regiter value class.
llvm-svn: 131096
It can happen that a live debug variable is the last use of a sub-register, and
the register allocator will pick a larger register class for the virtual
register. If the allocated register doesn't support the sub-register index,
just use %noreg for the debug variables instead of asserting.
In PR9872, a debug variable ends up in the sub_8bit_hi part of a GR32_ABCD
register. The register is split and one part is inflated to GR32 and assigned
%ESI because there are no more normal uses of sub_8bit_hi.
Since %ESI doesn't have that sub-register, substPhysReg asserted. Now it will
simply insert a %noreg instead, and the debug variable will be marked
unavailable in that range.
We don't currently have a way of saying: !"value" is in bits 8-15 of %ESI, I
don't know if DWARF even supports that.
llvm-svn: 131073
bit by allowing __weak and __strong to be added/dropped as part of
implicit conversions (qualification conversions in C++). A little
history: GCC lets one add/remove/change GC qualifiers just about
anywhere, implicitly. Clang did roughly the same before, but we
recently normalized the semantics of qualifiers across the board to
get a semantics that we could reason about (yay). Unfortunately, this
tightened the screws a bit too much for GC qualifiers, where it's
common to add/remove these qualifiers at will.
Overall, we're still in better shape than we were before: we don't
permit directly changing the GC qualifier (e.g., __weak -> __strong),
so type safety is improved. More importantly, we're internally
consistent in our handling of qualifiers, and the logic that allows
adding/removing GC qualifiers (but not adding/removing address
spaces!) only touches two obvious places.
Fixes <rdar://problem/9402499>.
llvm-svn: 131065
a new "QLaunchArch:<arch-name>" where <arch-name> is the architecture name.
This allows us to remotely launch a debugserver and then set the architecture
for the binary we will launch.
llvm-svn: 131064
often expressed as "x >= y ? x : y", there is a good chance we can extract
the existing "x >= y" from it and use that as a replacement for "max(x,y)==x".
llvm-svn: 131049
variables be evaluated statically.
Also fixed a bug that caused the results of
statically-evaluated expressions to be materialized
improperly.
This bug also removes some duplicate code.
llvm-svn: 131042