[lldb-dev] Limbo
Kopec, Matt
matt.kopec at intel.com
Thu Dec 20 08:40:23 PST 2012
I'm unsure why it is eStopReasonTrace, I think that's something we inherited. Would eStopReasonNone or a new thread exiting stop reason be a better candidate?
________________________________________
From: Jim Ingham [jingham at apple.com]
Sent: Wednesday, December 19, 2012 2:12 PM
To: Kaylor, Andrew
Cc: Greg Clayton; Kopec, Matt; lldb-dev at cs.uiuc.edu
Subject: Re: [lldb-dev] Limbo
Why is the stop reason for hitting this POSIXLimboStopInfo eStopReasonTrace. That's specifically the stop reason for single stepping, which should generally be handled by the plan that was doing the single stepping (and thus why there didn't need to be a handler for it in the Base thread plan.) I have no objections to adding a handler in ThreadPlanBase, but it seems weird to me that that's the stop reason for this Thread Exit stop event.
Jim
On Dec 19, 2012, at 10:47 AM, "Kaylor, Andrew" <andrew.kaylor at intel.com> wrote:
> The current trunk implementation of POSIXLimboStopInfo is returning 'true' for both ShouldStop() and ShouldNotify(). Having ShouldStop() return 'false' gets the process to run to completion, but I get a line saying "Process <pid> stopped and was programmatically restarted" even if I also return 'false' from ShouldNotify().
>
> To get rid of the 'restarted' message, I also have to add an 'eStopReasonTrace' handler to ThreadPlanBase.
>
> The attached patch addresses all three of these changes. If it looks right to everyone else I'll commit it. (BTW, this is adapted from some earlier work that Matt did that had never been committed to trunk, but I think we've done some testing with it here on Linux, Mac and FreeBSD.)
>
> -Andy
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Greg Clayton [mailto:gclayton at apple.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2012 4:14 PM
> To: Kopec, Matt
> Cc: Kaylor, Andrew; Jim Ingham; lldb-dev at cs.uiuc.edu
> Subject: Re: [lldb-dev] Limbo
>
>
> On Dec 18, 2012, at 2:34 PM, "Kopec, Matt" <matt.kopec at intel.com> wrote:
>
>> When multi-threading debugging works on Linux, this signal would be received for any inferior thread which exits, including non-main spawned threads. It would be possible for another thread to hit a breakpoint in this case. I'm wondering whether its' even useful to stop lldb/create a limbo stop reason when a thread exits? Is there any usefulness to examining a thread in limbo state (ie. a thread finished execution, it's about to exit. we can read registers...)? if anything, we would update the process thread list to remove the exiting thread and make sure it exits but I don't think the debugger needs to stop for this.
>
> If the thread is exiting and nothing can be done with it, it shouldn't even be in the process thread list. Just omit any threads in this state and do any cleanup needed to reap it/let it die.
>
>>
>> Matt
>> ________________________________________
>> From: lldb-dev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu [lldb-dev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu] on behalf of Kaylor, Andrew [andrew.kaylor at intel.com]
>> Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2012 5:12 PM
>> To: Jim Ingham
>> Cc: lldb-dev at cs.uiuc.edu
>> Subject: Re: [lldb-dev] Limbo
>>
>> Hi Jim,
>>
>> We're setting the limbo state because we got a 'SIGTRAP | PTRACE_EVENT_EXIT << 8' signal -- that is, the inferior process is exiting. It looks like this is only getting used by Linux and FreeBSD.
>>
>> I'm not sure it's even possible for another thread to hit a breakpoint at this stage, but if it is then the behavior you describe is what we'd want.
>>
>> -Andy
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Jim Ingham [mailto:jingham at apple.com]
>> Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2012 1:51 PM
>> To: Kaylor, Andrew
>> Cc: lldb-dev at cs.uiuc.edu
>> Subject: Re: [lldb-dev] Limbo
>>
>> I don't know enough about the Linux threading model to know what is really going on. Is the thread being in this "Limbo" state the reason why the process as a whole stopped, or did it stop for some other reason, and the thread in Limbo is just along for the ride? If the latter, then should it have a stop reason at all? In general, in lldb, threads only have stop reasons if they were one of the threads that caused the process to stop.
>>
>> You are achieving pretty much the same thing by returning false from its ShouldStop. But note that if you happen to hit a breakpoint on another thread when the Limbo'ed thread exists, then both threads will be reported to have stopped, one with reason breakpoint and one "thread exited". Is that what you want?
>>
>> Jim
>>
>> On Dec 18, 2012, at 1:24 PM, "Kaylor, Andrew" <andrew.kaylor at intel.com> wrote:
>>
>>> There's an issue on Linux where LLDB stop with "stop reason = thread exited" and displays a brief assembly dump from somewhere in libc. This seems to happen because it is stopping in the "limbo" state. I can make it go away by having POSIXLimboStopInfo::ShouldStop() return false instead of true.
>>>
>>> Is there any reason I shouldn't do that?
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Andy
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>>> lldb-dev at cs.uiuc.edu
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>>
>>
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>
> <limbo-stop-plan.patch>
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