Read the command line of the main target process as well as any other
process Delve attaches to in follow exec mode.
The command line can be viewed using the 'target list' command.
In follow exec mode this command line is used to match the follow exec
regex to decide whether or not to attach to a child process.
On macOS or when using rr the list of arguments is not available for
attached processes since there is no way to use the gdb serial protocol
to read it.
Fixes#2242
The compiler produces ABI compatibility wrappers for some functions.
We have changed the support for breakpoints to allow a single logical
breakpoint to correspond to multiple physical breakpoints, take
advantage of that to set breakpoints on both the ABI wrapper and the
real function.
Fixes#3296
Adds the ability to automatically debug child processes executed by the
target to the linux native backend.
This commit does not contain user interface or API to access this
functionality.
Updates #2551
Per https://pkg.go.dev/unsafe#Pointer conversions from unsafe.Pointer
to uintptr are only safe in limited circumstances. In particular only
conversions made in the syscall call are pinned.
Additionally add a call to runtime.KeepAlive to mitigate the bug
described in: https://github.com/golang/go/issues/58351
- use PT_SUSPEND/PT_RESUME to control running threads in
resume/stop/singleStep
- change manual stop signal from SIGTRAP to SIGSTOP to make manual stop
handling simpler
- change (*nativeProcess).trapWaitInternal to suspend newly created
threads when we are stepping a thread
- change (*nativeProcess).trapWaitInternal to handle some unhandled
stop events
- remove misleading (*nativeProcess).waitFast which does not do
anything different from the normal wait variant
- rewrite (*nativeProcess).stop to only set breakpoints for threads of
which we have received SIGTRAP
- rewrite (*nativeThread).singleStep to actually execute a single
instruction and to properly route signals
This patch modifies the behavior of the exec subcommand such that
you don't necessarily have to write the "./" prefix when trying
to debug a precompiled binary in your working directory.
For example (given foo.test in working dir), before this change:
dlv exec foo.test
Would result in an error, forcing the user to type:
dlv exec ./foo.test
This just makes things a bit more convenient.
* Add support for windows/arm64
* split sentinel files and add winarm64 experiment
* update loadBinaryInfoPE to support PIE binaries
* skip TestDump on windows/arm64
* run windows/arm64 compilation on windows/amd64
* add entry point check for pie binaries
* delete unusded code
* document windows/arm64 breakpoint
* implement changing windows/arm64 fp registers
* update crosscall offset names
* fix G load when using CGO
* fix testvariablescgo
* remove DerefGStructOffset
* derefrence gstructoffset in GStructOffset() if necessary
Introduces a new TargetGroup abstraction that can be used to manage
multiple related targets.
No actual management of child processes is implemented here, this is
just a refactoring to make it possible to do that in the future.
Updates #2551
In non-headless instances Ctrl-C should pause the process, not
terminate it. To make this work on Windows we have to pass the
syscall.CREATE_NEW_PROCESS_GROUP flag to os.StartProcess.
Go 1.19 also formats doc comments according to the new godoc syntax.
Some of our comments, especially unexported symbols did not conform to
the godoc syntax and therefore are mangled by 'go fmt'.
This PR runs 'go fmt' from go1.19 on everything and manually fixes the
problems.
See also:
https://github.com/golang/proposal/blob/master/design/51082-godocfmt.md
* pkg/proc: convert freebsd ptrace code to cgo
There is little point in having cgo call a custom C function, when the same
can be done directly from cgo (with less code and effort). Split the amd64
specific code into ptrace_freebsd_amd64.go. Also avoid mixing C.ptrace()
with syscall.SYS_PTRACE.
This will make further changes easier - no functional change intended.
* pkg/proc: check return values of ptrace calls on freebsd
The return values of the PT_GETNUMLWPS and PT_GETLWPLIST ptrace calls were
previously unchecked. While these should not fail, panic instead of using
-1 with slice allocation/handling.
* pkg/proc: return *amd64util.AMD64Xstate from freebsd ptraceGetRegset
Return a pointer to a struct, rather than a struct - this simplifies the
code in both the caller and the ptraceGetRegset function, while also avoiding
struct copying.
* pkg/proc: fix floating point register setting on freebsd
The original code could never work - PT_SETREGS on freebsd does not
take an iovec, nor does it set FP registers. Furthermore, the xsave
bytes were not stored in the amd64util.AMD64Xstate struct.
Updates #3001
* pkg/proc: re-enable function call injection on freebsd
Floating point registers can now be set and restored correctly.
This is a partial revert of 51090f003bace1f8cc37b8480ffdb6f6cc91fa5a.
Fixes#3001
* pkg/proc: deduplicate register setting code on freebsd
debugCallV2 for amd64 has a bug where it corrupts the flags registers
every time it is called, this commit works around that problem by
restoring flags one extra time to its original value after stepping out
of debugCallV2.
Fixes#2985
* _scripts/test_linux.sh,_scripts/test_windows.ps1: always return exit code 0 when testing on tip
Same as what we do for test_mac.sh
* proc: support function call injection on arm64
Support function call injection on arm64 with go1.19
On FreeBSD and OpenBSD, the use of runtime.LockOSThread is resulting in segfaults
within the Go runtime (see https://github.com/golang/go/issues/52394) - while it
should not be necessary, calling runtime.UnlockOSThread upon exit from
handlePtraceFuncs avoids this issue and allows the tests to run correctly.
Replaces sys.Iovec with a similar struct that uses uintptr instead of
*byte for the base field when referring to addresses of the target
process, so that we do not generate invalid pointers.
Fixes#2919
This commit improves the handling of hardcoded breakpoints in Delve.
A hardcoded breakpoint is a breakpoint instruction hardcoded in the
text of the program, for example through runtime.Breakpoint.
1. hardcoded breakpoints are now indicated by setting the breakpoint
field on any thread stopped by a hardcoded breakpoint
2. if multiple hardcoded breakpoints are hit during a single stop all
will be notified to the user.
3. a debugger breakpoint with an unmet condition can't hide a hardcoded
breakpoint anymore.
* go.mod: update golang.org/x/tools to v0.1.8
Fixes TestGeneratedDoc on go1.18
* TeamCity: bump test matrix
Add 1.18 to test matrix. Remove 1.15 from test matrix and from support range.
* proc,tests: update for regabi on arm64 and 386
Make sure that stacktrace registers always contain the PC register of
the current frame, even though the debug_frame rules might not specify
it on architectures that use a link register.
The PC register is needed to look up loclist entries for variable
evaluation.
* goversion: bump maximum supported Go version to 1.18
* proc: disable asyncpreempt on linux/arm64
Asyncpreempt on linux/arm64 can sometimes restart a sequence of
instructions which will make breakpoint appear to be hit twice in some
cases.
Fix signal handling during thread single stepping so that signals that
are generated by executing the current instruction are immediately
propagated to the inferior, while signals other signals sent to the
thread are delayed until the full resume happens.
Fixes a bug where a breakpoint set on an instruction that causes a
SIGSEGV would make Delve hang and a bug where signals received during
single step would make it look like an instruction is executed twice.
Fixes#2801Fixes#2792
* made Pid a method of Target instead of a method of Process
* changed argument of NewTarget to ProcessInternal, since that's the
interface that backends have to implement
* removed warnings about ProcessInternal since there is no way for
users of pkg/proc to access those methods anyway
* made RecordingManipulation an optional interface for backends, Target
supplies its own dummy implementation when the backend doesn't
* inlined small interfaces that only existed to be inlined in
proc.Process anyway
* removed unused function findExecutable in the Windows and no-native
darwin backends
* removed (*EvalScope).EvalVariable, an old synonym for EvalExpression
There are persistent issues with watchpoints on Windows, it is not
clear whether it's a problem with the VM running the tests or if there
is a real bug in our implementation of hardware breakpoints on Windows.
Until the cause can be determined watchpoints on Windows will be
disabled.
Updates #2768
Normally calls can't be performed on recorded processes, becuase the
future instructions executed by the target are predetermined. The rr
debugger however has a mechanism that allows this by taking the current
state of the recording and allowing it to diverge from the recording,
temporarily.
This commit adds support for starting and ending such diversions around
function calls.
Note: this requires rr version 5.5 of later to work, see:
https://github.com/rr-debugger/rr/pull/2748
* proc/native: always stop after RequestManualStop on Windows
On Windows RequestManualStop will generate an exception on a special
DbgUiRemoteBreakin thread, sometimes this thread will die before we
finish stopping the process. We need to account for that and still stop
even if the thread is gone and no other thread hit a breakpoint.
Fixes flakiness of TestIssue419.
* proc/native: fix watchpoints with new threads on Windows
When a new thread is created we must reapply all watchpoints to it,
like we do on linux.
* tests: be lenient on goroutinestackprog tests on Windows
We can not guarantee that we find all goroutines stopped in a good
place and sometimes the stacktrace fails on Windows.
This patch enables the eBPF tracer backend to parse the ID of the
Goroutine which hit the uprobe. This implementation is specific to AMD64
and will have to be generalized further in order to be used on other
architectures.
* proc: move breakpoint condition evaluation out of backends
Moves breakpoint condition evaluation from the point where breakpoints
are set, inside ContinueOnce, to (*Target).Continue.
This accomplishes three things:
1. the breakpoint evaluation method needs not be exported anymore
2. breakpoint condition evaluation can be done with a full scope,
containing a Target object, something that wasn't possible before
because ContinueOnce doesn't have access to the Target object.
3. moves breakpoint condition evaluation out of the critical section
where some of the threads of the target process might be still
running.
* proc/native: handle process death during stop() on Windows
It is possible that the thread dies while we are inside the stop()
function. This results in an Access is denied error being returned by
SuspendThread being called on threads that no longer exist.
Delay the reporting the error from SuspendThread until the end of
stop() and only report it if the thread still exists at that point.
Fixes flakyness with TestIssue1101 that was exacerbated by moving
breakpoint condition evaluation outside of the backends.
* pkg/proc: implement support for hit count breakpoints
* update comment
* udpate hitcount comment
* update HitCond description
* add test for hit condition error
* respond to review
* service/dap: add support for hit count breakpoints
* use amendbps to preserve hit counts
* update test health doc
* fix failing test
* simplify hit conditions
* REmove RequestString, use name instead
* update backend_test_health.md
* document hit count cond
* fix tests
A RequestManualStop received while the target program is stopped can
induce a crash when the target is restarted.
This is caused by the phantom breakpoint detection that was introduced
in PR #2179 / commit e69d536.
Instead of always interpreting an unexplained SIGTRAP as a phantom
breakpoint memorize all possible unreported breakpoint hits and only
act on it when the thread hasn't moved from one.
Also clarifies the behavior of the halt command when it is received
while the target is stopped or in the process of stopping.