* proc: move defer breakpoint code into a function
Moves the code that sets a breakpoint on the first deferred function,
used by both next and StepOut, to its function.
* proc: implement reverse step/next/stepout
When the direction of execution is reversed (on a recording) Step, Next and
StepOut will behave similarly to their forward version. However there are
some subtle interactions between their behavior, prologue skipping, deferred
calls and normal calls. Specifically:
- when stepping backwards we need to set a breakpoint on the first
instruction after each CALL instruction, once this breakpoint is reached we
need to execute a single StepInstruction operation to reverse step into the
CALL.
- to insure that the prologue is skipped reverse next needs to check if it
is on the first instruction after the prologue, and if it is behave like
reverse stepout.
- there is no reason to set breakpoints on deferred calls when reverse
nexting or reverse stepping out, they will never be hit.
- reverse step out should generally place its breakpoint on the CALL
instruction that created the current stack frame (which will be the CALL
instruction immediately preceding the instruction at the return address).
- reverse step out needs to treat panic calls and deferreturn calls
specially.
* service,terminal: implement reverse step, next, stepout
* proc,proc/*: move SelectedGoroutine to proc.Target, remove PostInitializationSetup
moves SelectedGoroutine, SwitchThread and SwitchGoroutine to
proc.Target, merges PostInitializationSetup with NewTarget.
* proc,proc/*: add StopReason field to Target
Adds a StopReason field to the Target object describing why the target
process is currently stopped. This will be useful for the DAP server
(which needs to report this reason in one of its requests) as well as
making pull request #1785 (reverse step) conformant to the new
architecture.
* proc: collect NewTarget arguments into a struct
Implement debugging function for 386 on linux with reference to AMD64.
There are a few remaining problems that need to be solved in another time.
1. The stacktrace of cgo are not exactly as expected.
2. Not implement `core` for now.
3. Not implement `call` for now. Can't not find `runtime·debugCallV1` or
similar function in $GOROOT/src/runtime/asm_386.s.
Update #20
* proc/native/linux: only set breakpoints on threads that receive SIGTRAP
* proc/native/linux: do not call (*Thread).Stopped inside (*Process).stop
(*Thread).Stopped is slow because it needs to open, read and parse a
file in /proc, we don't actually need to do that, we can just rely on
the value of Thread.os.running.
Benchmark before:
BenchmarkConditionalBreakpoints-4 1 12476166303 ns/op
Benchmark after:
BenchmarkConditionalBreakpoints-4 1 10403533675 ns/op
Conditional breakpoint evaluation: 1.24ms -> 1ms
Updates #1549
This change adds `ProcessVmRead` and `ProcessVmWrite` wrappers around
the syscalls `process_vm_readv` and `process_vm_writev`, available since
Linux 3.2. These follow the same permission model as `ptrace`, but they
don't actually require being attached, which means they can be called
directly from any thread in the debugger. They also use `iovec` to write
entire blocks at once, rather than having to peek/poke each `uintptr`.
These wrappers are used in `Thread.ReadMemory` and `WriteMemory`, still
falling back to `ptrace` if that fails for any reason. Notably,
`process_vm_writev` respects memory protection, so it can't modify
read-only memory like `ptrace`. This frequently occurs when writing
breakpoints in read-only `.text`, so to avoid a lot of wasted `EFAULT`
calls, we only try `process_vm_writev` for larger writes.
1. Don't use intelligent '#' in fmt of go because it is not always satisfying
for diffrent version of golang. Always keep one leading zero for octal and
one leading '0x' for hex manually. Then keep alignment for every byte.
2. Always keep addr alignment when the lens of two adjacent address are
different.
Update #1814.
Using a stop channel to signal clean shutdown to the server's
goroutines. Also updates the tests to trigger disconnectChan.
This helps avoid spurious error logs when the client disconnects, when
Ctrl+C is pressed, etc.
* Panic guard for DAP request handling
* Use GetSeq
* Re-vendor new version of go-dap
* Remove comment
* Update error message
* Reuse er.Message in Format
Adds an optional scope prefix to the `regs` command which allows
printing registers for any stack frame (as long as they were somehow
saved). Issue #1838 is not yet to be closed since we are still not
recovering the registers of a segfaulting frame.
Updates #1838
As we rearrange the code and the Go compiler changes the error message
returned by the compiler on unsupported architectures will change too,
making it un-googlable. Since the error message tends to be rather
obscure too this regularly confuses newbies.
This is an effort to make the error message for unsupported GOOS/GOARCH
combinations the same across all unsupported combinations and to make
it more user friendly.
Directories containing Go source code are supposed to contain a single
package. This property happens to be checked by cmd/go itself so it
will happen even before the syntax is fully checked and therefore has a
high probability of being the first (and only) error message being
print.
Here we take advantage of this by adding to the pkg/proc/native
directory a file with a bad package line that only gets compiled in on
unsupported GOOS/GOARCH combinations.
At present the error message for compiling Delve on unsupported systems
will be:
service/debugger/debugger.go:21:2: found packages native (proc.go) and your_operating_system_and_architecture_combination_is_not_supported_by_delve (support_sentinel.go) in $PATH_TO_DELVE/pkg/proc/native
macOS hasn't /usr/include/sys/types.h header with Canalina or later.
switch types.h path to CommandLineTools if kernel minor version up to 15 or later.
* Fixed DirIdx (index starts at one)
I am using the elf to load C++ based elf and there the index starts at one and not zero, hence the minor fix.
* Added test
* Added proper test for c-generated elf & replaced index offset by adding build dir
* Changed other IncludeDir test
* Format fix & replace print with actual test
* Format fixes @derekparker requested.
Go 1.8 has been out of date for a while and the code to support it is
potentially dangerous if a future version of Go removes the runtime
types from debug_info and also changes their representation.
Removes the restriction that the DWARF type for the receiver of a method
must be a TypeDef. This seems reasonable in practice, but it turns out
Go DWARF does not consider
```
type X int
```
to be a typedef. This patch also allows for calling a method where the
receiver is not used or passed in, such as:
```
func (_ X) Method() { println("why") }
```
runtime.g is a large and growing struct, we only need a few fields.
Instead of using loadValue to load the full contents of g, cache its
memory and then only load the fields we care about.
Benchmark before:
BenchmarkConditionalBreakpoints-4 1 14586710018 ns/op
Benchmark after:
BenchmarkConditionalBreakpoints-4 1 12476166303 ns/op
Conditional breakpoint evaluation: 1.45ms -> 1.24ms
Updates #1549
Instead of reloading the registers for every thread every time the
process executes, reload the registers on demand for individual threads
and memoize the result.
According to #1800#1584#1038, `dlv` should enable the user to dive into
memory. User can print binary data in specific memory address range.
But not support for sepecific variable name or structures temporarily.(Because
I have no idea that modify `print` command.)
Close#1584.
The stacktrace code occasionally needs the value of g.m.g0.sched.sp to
switch stacks. Since this is only needed rarely and calling parseG is
relatively expensive we should delay doing it until we know it will be
needed.
Benchmark before:
BenchmarkConditionalBreakpoints-4 1 17326345671 ns/op
Benchmark after:
BenchmarkConditionalBreakpoints-4 1 15649407130 ns/op
Reduces conditional breakpoint latency from 1.7ms to 1.56ms.
Updates #1549
A significant amount of time is spent generating the string
representation for the proc.Registers object of each thread, since this
field is rarely used (only when the Registers API is called) it should
be generated on demand.
Also by changing the internal representation of proc.Register to be
closer to that of op.DwarfRegister it will help us implement #1838
(when Delve will need to be able to display the registers of an
internal frame, which we currently represent using op.DwarfRegister
objects).
Benchmark before:
BenchmarkConditionalBreakpoints-4 1 22292554301 ns/op
Benchmark after:
BenchmarkConditionalBreakpoints-4 1 17326345671 ns/op
Reduces conditional breakpoint latency from 2.2ms to 1.7ms.
Updates #1549, #1838
* service: also search IPv6 connections when checking user
When checking if the user is allowed to connect to this Delve instance
also search IPv6 connections even though the local address is IPv4.
Fixes#1835
* cmd: add flag to disable same-user check
Fixes#1835