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| #!/usr/bin/python | |
| # NOTE: this file is taken from the Python source distribution | |
| # It can be found under Tools/gdb/libpython.py. It is shipped with Cython | |
| # because it's not installed as a python module, and because changes are only | |
| # merged into new python versions (v3.2+). | |
| ''' | |
| From gdb 7 onwards, gdb's build can be configured --with-python, allowing gdb | |
| to be extended with Python code e.g. for library-specific data visualizations, | |
| such as for the C++ STL types. Documentation on this API can be seen at: | |
| http://sourceware.org/gdb/current/onlinedocs/gdb/Python-API.html | |
| This python module deals with the case when the process being debugged (the | |
| "inferior process" in gdb parlance) is itself python, or more specifically, | |
| linked against libpython. In this situation, almost every item of data is a | |
| (PyObject*), and having the debugger merely print their addresses is not very | |
| enlightening. | |
| This module embeds knowledge about the implementation details of libpython so | |
| that we can emit useful visualizations e.g. a string, a list, a dict, a frame | |
| giving file/line information and the state of local variables | |
| In particular, given a gdb.Value corresponding to a PyObject* in the inferior | |
| process, we can generate a "proxy value" within the gdb process. For example, | |
| given a PyObject* in the inferior process that is in fact a PyListObject* | |
| holding three PyObject* that turn out to be PyBytesObject* instances, we can | |
| generate a proxy value within the gdb process that is a list of bytes | |
| instances: | |
| [b"foo", b"bar", b"baz"] | |
| Doing so can be expensive for complicated graphs of objects, and could take | |
| some time, so we also have a "write_repr" method that writes a representation | |
| of the data to a file-like object. This allows us to stop the traversal by | |
| having the file-like object raise an exception if it gets too much data. | |
| With both "proxyval" and "write_repr" we keep track of the set of all addresses | |
| visited so far in the traversal, to avoid infinite recursion due to cycles in | |
| the graph of object references. | |
| We try to defer gdb.lookup_type() invocations for python types until as late as | |
| possible: for a dynamically linked python binary, when the process starts in | |
| the debugger, the libpython.so hasn't been dynamically loaded yet, so none of | |
| the type names are known to the debugger | |
| The module also extends gdb with some python-specific commands. | |
| ''' | |
| # NOTE: some gdbs are linked with Python 3, so this file should be dual-syntax | |
| # compatible (2.6+ and 3.0+). See #19308. | |
| from __future__ import print_function | |
| import gdb | |
| import os | |
| import locale | |
| import sys | |
| if sys.version_info[0] >= 3: | |
| unichr = chr | |
| xrange = range | |
| long = int | |
| # Look up the gdb.Type for some standard types: | |
| # Those need to be refreshed as types (pointer sizes) may change when | |
| # gdb loads different executables | |
| def _type_char_ptr(): | |
| return gdb.lookup_type('char').pointer() # char* | |
| def _type_unsigned_char_ptr(): | |
| return gdb.lookup_type('unsigned char').pointer() # unsigned char* | |
| def _type_unsigned_short_ptr(): | |
| return gdb.lookup_type('unsigned short').pointer() | |
| def _type_unsigned_int_ptr(): | |
| return gdb.lookup_type('unsigned int').pointer() | |
| def _sizeof_void_p(): | |
| return gdb.lookup_type('void').pointer().sizeof | |
| # value computed later, see PyUnicodeObjectPtr.proxy() | |
| _is_pep393 = None | |
| Py_TPFLAGS_HEAPTYPE = (1 << 9) | |
| Py_TPFLAGS_LONG_SUBCLASS = (1 << 24) | |
| Py_TPFLAGS_LIST_SUBCLASS = (1 << 25) | |
| Py_TPFLAGS_TUPLE_SUBCLASS = (1 << 26) | |
| Py_TPFLAGS_BYTES_SUBCLASS = (1 << 27) | |
| Py_TPFLAGS_UNICODE_SUBCLASS = (1 << 28) | |
| Py_TPFLAGS_DICT_SUBCLASS = (1 << 29) | |
| Py_TPFLAGS_BASE_EXC_SUBCLASS = (1 << 30) | |
| Py_TPFLAGS_TYPE_SUBCLASS = (1 << 31) | |
| MAX_OUTPUT_LEN=1024 | |
| hexdigits = "0123456789abcdef" | |
| ENCODING = locale.getpreferredencoding() | |
| EVALFRAME = '_PyEval_EvalFrameDefault' | |
| class NullPyObjectPtr(RuntimeError): | |
| pass | |
| def safety_limit(val): | |
| # Given an integer value from the process being debugged, limit it to some | |
| # safety threshold so that arbitrary breakage within said process doesn't | |
| # break the gdb process too much (e.g. sizes of iterations, sizes of lists) | |
| return min(val, 1000) | |
| def safe_range(val): | |
| # As per range, but don't trust the value too much: cap it to a safety | |
| # threshold in case the data was corrupted | |
| return xrange(safety_limit(int(val))) | |
| if sys.version_info[0] >= 3: | |
| def write_unicode(file, text): | |
| file.write(text) | |
| else: | |
| def write_unicode(file, text): | |
| # Write a byte or unicode string to file. Unicode strings are encoded to | |
| # ENCODING encoding with 'backslashreplace' error handler to avoid | |
| # UnicodeEncodeError. | |
| if isinstance(text, unicode): | |
| text = text.encode(ENCODING, 'backslashreplace') | |
| file.write(text) | |
| try: | |
| os_fsencode = os.fsencode | |
| except AttributeError: | |
| def os_fsencode(filename): | |
| if not isinstance(filename, unicode): | |
| return filename | |
| encoding = sys.getfilesystemencoding() | |
| if encoding == 'mbcs': | |
| # mbcs doesn't support surrogateescape | |
| return filename.encode(encoding) | |
| encoded = [] | |
| for char in filename: | |
| # surrogateescape error handler | |
| if 0xDC80 <= ord(char) <= 0xDCFF: | |
| byte = chr(ord(char) - 0xDC00) | |
| else: | |
| byte = char.encode(encoding) | |
| encoded.append(byte) | |
| return ''.join(encoded) | |
| class StringTruncated(RuntimeError): | |
| pass | |
| class TruncatedStringIO(object): | |
| '''Similar to io.StringIO, but can truncate the output by raising a | |
| StringTruncated exception''' | |
| def __init__(self, maxlen=None): | |
| self._val = '' | |
| self.maxlen = maxlen | |
| def write(self, data): | |
| if self.maxlen: | |
| if len(data) + len(self._val) > self.maxlen: | |
| # Truncation: | |
| self._val += data[0:self.maxlen - len(self._val)] | |
| raise StringTruncated() | |
| self._val += data | |
| def getvalue(self): | |
| return self._val | |
| class PyObjectPtr(object): | |
| """ | |
| Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's either a (PyObject*) within the | |
| inferior process, or some subclass pointer e.g. (PyBytesObject*) | |
| There will be a subclass for every refined PyObject type that we care | |
| about. | |
| Note that at every stage the underlying pointer could be NULL, point | |
| to corrupt data, etc; this is the debugger, after all. | |
| """ | |
| _typename = 'PyObject' | |
| def __init__(self, gdbval, cast_to=None): | |
| if cast_to: | |
| self._gdbval = gdbval.cast(cast_to) | |
| else: | |
| self._gdbval = gdbval | |
| def field(self, name): | |
| ''' | |
| Get the gdb.Value for the given field within the PyObject, coping with | |
| some python 2 versus python 3 differences. | |
| Various libpython types are defined using the "PyObject_HEAD" and | |
| "PyObject_VAR_HEAD" macros. | |
| In Python 2, this these are defined so that "ob_type" and (for a var | |
| object) "ob_size" are fields of the type in question. | |
| In Python 3, this is defined as an embedded PyVarObject type thus: | |
| PyVarObject ob_base; | |
| so that the "ob_size" field is located insize the "ob_base" field, and | |
| the "ob_type" is most easily accessed by casting back to a (PyObject*). | |
| ''' | |
| if self.is_null(): | |
| raise NullPyObjectPtr(self) | |
| if name == 'ob_type': | |
| pyo_ptr = self._gdbval.cast(PyObjectPtr.get_gdb_type()) | |
| return pyo_ptr.dereference()[name] | |
| if name == 'ob_size': | |
| pyo_ptr = self._gdbval.cast(PyVarObjectPtr.get_gdb_type()) | |
| return pyo_ptr.dereference()[name] | |
| # General case: look it up inside the object: | |
| return self._gdbval.dereference()[name] | |
| def pyop_field(self, name): | |
| ''' | |
| Get a PyObjectPtr for the given PyObject* field within this PyObject, | |
| coping with some python 2 versus python 3 differences. | |
| ''' | |
| return PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self.field(name)) | |
| def write_field_repr(self, name, out, visited): | |
| ''' | |
| Extract the PyObject* field named "name", and write its representation | |
| to file-like object "out" | |
| ''' | |
| field_obj = self.pyop_field(name) | |
| field_obj.write_repr(out, visited) | |
| def get_truncated_repr(self, maxlen): | |
| ''' | |
| Get a repr-like string for the data, but truncate it at "maxlen" bytes | |
| (ending the object graph traversal as soon as you do) | |
| ''' | |
| out = TruncatedStringIO(maxlen) | |
| try: | |
| self.write_repr(out, set()) | |
| except StringTruncated: | |
| # Truncation occurred: | |
| return out.getvalue() + '...(truncated)' | |
| # No truncation occurred: | |
| return out.getvalue() | |
| def type(self): | |
| return PyTypeObjectPtr(self.field('ob_type')) | |
| def is_null(self): | |
| return 0 == long(self._gdbval) | |
| def is_optimized_out(self): | |
| ''' | |
| Is the value of the underlying PyObject* visible to the debugger? | |
| This can vary with the precise version of the compiler used to build | |
| Python, and the precise version of gdb. | |
| See e.g. https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=556975 with | |
| PyEval_EvalFrameEx's "f" | |
| ''' | |
| return self._gdbval.is_optimized_out | |
| def safe_tp_name(self): | |
| try: | |
| return self.type().field('tp_name').string() | |
| except NullPyObjectPtr: | |
| # NULL tp_name? | |
| return 'unknown' | |
| except RuntimeError: | |
| # Can't even read the object at all? | |
| return 'unknown' | |
| def proxyval(self, visited): | |
| ''' | |
| Scrape a value from the inferior process, and try to represent it | |
| within the gdb process, whilst (hopefully) avoiding crashes when | |
| the remote data is corrupt. | |
| Derived classes will override this. | |
| For example, a PyIntObject* with ob_ival 42 in the inferior process | |
| should result in an int(42) in this process. | |
| visited: a set of all gdb.Value pyobject pointers already visited | |
| whilst generating this value (to guard against infinite recursion when | |
| visiting object graphs with loops). Analogous to Py_ReprEnter and | |
| Py_ReprLeave | |
| ''' | |
| class FakeRepr(object): | |
| """ | |
| Class representing a non-descript PyObject* value in the inferior | |
| process for when we don't have a custom scraper, intended to have | |
| a sane repr(). | |
| """ | |
| def __init__(self, tp_name, address): | |
| self.tp_name = tp_name | |
| self.address = address | |
| def __repr__(self): | |
| # For the NULL pointer, we have no way of knowing a type, so | |
| # special-case it as per | |
| # http://bugs.python.org/issue8032#msg100882 | |
| if self.address == 0: | |
| return '0x0' | |
| return '<%s at remote 0x%x>' % (self.tp_name, self.address) | |
| return FakeRepr(self.safe_tp_name(), | |
| long(self._gdbval)) | |
| def write_repr(self, out, visited): | |
| ''' | |
| Write a string representation of the value scraped from the inferior | |
| process to "out", a file-like object. | |
| ''' | |
| # Default implementation: generate a proxy value and write its repr | |
| # However, this could involve a lot of work for complicated objects, | |
| # so for derived classes we specialize this | |
| return out.write(repr(self.proxyval(visited))) | |
| def subclass_from_type(cls, t): | |
| ''' | |
| Given a PyTypeObjectPtr instance wrapping a gdb.Value that's a | |
| (PyTypeObject*), determine the corresponding subclass of PyObjectPtr | |
| to use | |
| Ideally, we would look up the symbols for the global types, but that | |
| isn't working yet: | |
| (gdb) python print gdb.lookup_symbol('PyList_Type')[0].value | |
| Traceback (most recent call last): | |
| File "<string>", line 1, in <module> | |
| NotImplementedError: Symbol type not yet supported in Python scripts. | |
| Error while executing Python code. | |
| For now, we use tp_flags, after doing some string comparisons on the | |
| tp_name for some special-cases that don't seem to be visible through | |
| flags | |
| ''' | |
| try: | |
| tp_name = t.field('tp_name').string() | |
| tp_flags = int(t.field('tp_flags')) | |
| except RuntimeError: | |
| # Handle any kind of error e.g. NULL ptrs by simply using the base | |
| # class | |
| return cls | |
| #print('tp_flags = 0x%08x' % tp_flags) | |
| #print('tp_name = %r' % tp_name) | |
| name_map = {'bool': PyBoolObjectPtr, | |
| 'classobj': PyClassObjectPtr, | |
| 'NoneType': PyNoneStructPtr, | |
| 'frame': PyFrameObjectPtr, | |
| 'set' : PySetObjectPtr, | |
| 'frozenset' : PySetObjectPtr, | |
| 'builtin_function_or_method' : PyCFunctionObjectPtr, | |
| 'method-wrapper': wrapperobject, | |
| } | |
| if tp_name in name_map: | |
| return name_map[tp_name] | |
| if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_HEAPTYPE: | |
| return HeapTypeObjectPtr | |
| if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_LONG_SUBCLASS: | |
| return PyLongObjectPtr | |
| if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_LIST_SUBCLASS: | |
| return PyListObjectPtr | |
| if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_TUPLE_SUBCLASS: | |
| return PyTupleObjectPtr | |
| if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_BYTES_SUBCLASS: | |
| return PyBytesObjectPtr | |
| if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_UNICODE_SUBCLASS: | |
| return PyUnicodeObjectPtr | |
| if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_DICT_SUBCLASS: | |
| return PyDictObjectPtr | |
| if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_BASE_EXC_SUBCLASS: | |
| return PyBaseExceptionObjectPtr | |
| #if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_TYPE_SUBCLASS: | |
| # return PyTypeObjectPtr | |
| # Use the base class: | |
| return cls | |
| def from_pyobject_ptr(cls, gdbval): | |
| ''' | |
| Try to locate the appropriate derived class dynamically, and cast | |
| the pointer accordingly. | |
| ''' | |
| try: | |
| p = PyObjectPtr(gdbval) | |
| cls = cls.subclass_from_type(p.type()) | |
| return cls(gdbval, cast_to=cls.get_gdb_type()) | |
| except RuntimeError: | |
| # Handle any kind of error e.g. NULL ptrs by simply using the base | |
| # class | |
| pass | |
| return cls(gdbval) | |
| def get_gdb_type(cls): | |
| return gdb.lookup_type(cls._typename).pointer() | |
| def as_address(self): | |
| return long(self._gdbval) | |
| class PyVarObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| _typename = 'PyVarObject' | |
| class ProxyAlreadyVisited(object): | |
| ''' | |
| Placeholder proxy to use when protecting against infinite recursion due to | |
| loops in the object graph. | |
| Analogous to the values emitted by the users of Py_ReprEnter and Py_ReprLeave | |
| ''' | |
| def __init__(self, rep): | |
| self._rep = rep | |
| def __repr__(self): | |
| return self._rep | |
| def _write_instance_repr(out, visited, name, pyop_attrdict, address): | |
| '''Shared code for use by all classes: | |
| write a representation to file-like object "out"''' | |
| out.write('<') | |
| out.write(name) | |
| # Write dictionary of instance attributes: | |
| if isinstance(pyop_attrdict, PyDictObjectPtr): | |
| out.write('(') | |
| first = True | |
| for pyop_arg, pyop_val in pyop_attrdict.iteritems(): | |
| if not first: | |
| out.write(', ') | |
| first = False | |
| out.write(pyop_arg.proxyval(visited)) | |
| out.write('=') | |
| pyop_val.write_repr(out, visited) | |
| out.write(')') | |
| out.write(' at remote 0x%x>' % address) | |
| class InstanceProxy(object): | |
| def __init__(self, cl_name, attrdict, address): | |
| self.cl_name = cl_name | |
| self.attrdict = attrdict | |
| self.address = address | |
| def __repr__(self): | |
| if isinstance(self.attrdict, dict): | |
| kwargs = ', '.join(["%s=%r" % (arg, val) | |
| for arg, val in self.attrdict.iteritems()]) | |
| return '<%s(%s) at remote 0x%x>' % (self.cl_name, | |
| kwargs, self.address) | |
| else: | |
| return '<%s at remote 0x%x>' % (self.cl_name, | |
| self.address) | |
| def _PyObject_VAR_SIZE(typeobj, nitems): | |
| if _PyObject_VAR_SIZE._type_size_t is None: | |
| _PyObject_VAR_SIZE._type_size_t = gdb.lookup_type('size_t') | |
| return ( ( typeobj.field('tp_basicsize') + | |
| nitems * typeobj.field('tp_itemsize') + | |
| (_sizeof_void_p() - 1) | |
| ) & ~(_sizeof_void_p() - 1) | |
| ).cast(_PyObject_VAR_SIZE._type_size_t) | |
| _PyObject_VAR_SIZE._type_size_t = None | |
| class HeapTypeObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| _typename = 'PyObject' | |
| def get_attr_dict(self): | |
| ''' | |
| Get the PyDictObject ptr representing the attribute dictionary | |
| (or None if there's a problem) | |
| ''' | |
| try: | |
| typeobj = self.type() | |
| dictoffset = int_from_int(typeobj.field('tp_dictoffset')) | |
| if dictoffset != 0: | |
| if dictoffset < 0: | |
| type_PyVarObject_ptr = gdb.lookup_type('PyVarObject').pointer() | |
| tsize = int_from_int(self._gdbval.cast(type_PyVarObject_ptr)['ob_size']) | |
| if tsize < 0: | |
| tsize = -tsize | |
| size = _PyObject_VAR_SIZE(typeobj, tsize) | |
| dictoffset += size | |
| assert dictoffset > 0 | |
| assert dictoffset % _sizeof_void_p() == 0 | |
| dictptr = self._gdbval.cast(_type_char_ptr()) + dictoffset | |
| PyObjectPtrPtr = PyObjectPtr.get_gdb_type().pointer() | |
| dictptr = dictptr.cast(PyObjectPtrPtr) | |
| return PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(dictptr.dereference()) | |
| except RuntimeError: | |
| # Corrupt data somewhere; fail safe | |
| pass | |
| # Not found, or some kind of error: | |
| return None | |
| def proxyval(self, visited): | |
| ''' | |
| Support for classes. | |
| Currently we just locate the dictionary using a transliteration to | |
| python of _PyObject_GetDictPtr, ignoring descriptors | |
| ''' | |
| # Guard against infinite loops: | |
| if self.as_address() in visited: | |
| return ProxyAlreadyVisited('<...>') | |
| visited.add(self.as_address()) | |
| pyop_attr_dict = self.get_attr_dict() | |
| if pyop_attr_dict: | |
| attr_dict = pyop_attr_dict.proxyval(visited) | |
| else: | |
| attr_dict = {} | |
| tp_name = self.safe_tp_name() | |
| # Class: | |
| return InstanceProxy(tp_name, attr_dict, long(self._gdbval)) | |
| def write_repr(self, out, visited): | |
| # Guard against infinite loops: | |
| if self.as_address() in visited: | |
| out.write('<...>') | |
| return | |
| visited.add(self.as_address()) | |
| pyop_attrdict = self.get_attr_dict() | |
| _write_instance_repr(out, visited, | |
| self.safe_tp_name(), pyop_attrdict, self.as_address()) | |
| class ProxyException(Exception): | |
| def __init__(self, tp_name, args): | |
| self.tp_name = tp_name | |
| self.args = args | |
| def __repr__(self): | |
| return '%s%r' % (self.tp_name, self.args) | |
| class PyBaseExceptionObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| """ | |
| Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's a PyBaseExceptionObject* i.e. an exception | |
| within the process being debugged. | |
| """ | |
| _typename = 'PyBaseExceptionObject' | |
| def proxyval(self, visited): | |
| # Guard against infinite loops: | |
| if self.as_address() in visited: | |
| return ProxyAlreadyVisited('(...)') | |
| visited.add(self.as_address()) | |
| arg_proxy = self.pyop_field('args').proxyval(visited) | |
| return ProxyException(self.safe_tp_name(), | |
| arg_proxy) | |
| def write_repr(self, out, visited): | |
| # Guard against infinite loops: | |
| if self.as_address() in visited: | |
| out.write('(...)') | |
| return | |
| visited.add(self.as_address()) | |
| out.write(self.safe_tp_name()) | |
| self.write_field_repr('args', out, visited) | |
| class PyClassObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| """ | |
| Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's a PyClassObject* i.e. a <classobj> | |
| instance within the process being debugged. | |
| """ | |
| _typename = 'PyClassObject' | |
| class BuiltInFunctionProxy(object): | |
| def __init__(self, ml_name): | |
| self.ml_name = ml_name | |
| def __repr__(self): | |
| return "<built-in function %s>" % self.ml_name | |
| class BuiltInMethodProxy(object): | |
| def __init__(self, ml_name, pyop_m_self): | |
| self.ml_name = ml_name | |
| self.pyop_m_self = pyop_m_self | |
| def __repr__(self): | |
| return ('<built-in method %s of %s object at remote 0x%x>' | |
| % (self.ml_name, | |
| self.pyop_m_self.safe_tp_name(), | |
| self.pyop_m_self.as_address()) | |
| ) | |
| class PyCFunctionObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| """ | |
| Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's a PyCFunctionObject* | |
| (see Include/methodobject.h and Objects/methodobject.c) | |
| """ | |
| _typename = 'PyCFunctionObject' | |
| def proxyval(self, visited): | |
| m_ml = self.field('m_ml') # m_ml is a (PyMethodDef*) | |
| ml_name = m_ml['ml_name'].string() | |
| pyop_m_self = self.pyop_field('m_self') | |
| if pyop_m_self.is_null(): | |
| return BuiltInFunctionProxy(ml_name) | |
| else: | |
| return BuiltInMethodProxy(ml_name, pyop_m_self) | |
| class PyCodeObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| """ | |
| Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's a PyCodeObject* i.e. a <code> instance | |
| within the process being debugged. | |
| """ | |
| _typename = 'PyCodeObject' | |
| def addr2line(self, addrq): | |
| ''' | |
| Get the line number for a given bytecode offset | |
| Analogous to PyCode_Addr2Line; translated from pseudocode in | |
| Objects/lnotab_notes.txt | |
| ''' | |
| co_lnotab = self.pyop_field('co_lnotab').proxyval(set()) | |
| # Initialize lineno to co_firstlineno as per PyCode_Addr2Line | |
| # not 0, as lnotab_notes.txt has it: | |
| lineno = int_from_int(self.field('co_firstlineno')) | |
| addr = 0 | |
| for addr_incr, line_incr in zip(co_lnotab[::2], co_lnotab[1::2]): | |
| addr += ord(addr_incr) | |
| if addr > addrq: | |
| return lineno | |
| lineno += ord(line_incr) | |
| return lineno | |
| class PyDictObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| """ | |
| Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's a PyDictObject* i.e. a dict instance | |
| within the process being debugged. | |
| """ | |
| _typename = 'PyDictObject' | |
| def iteritems(self): | |
| ''' | |
| Yields a sequence of (PyObjectPtr key, PyObjectPtr value) pairs, | |
| analogous to dict.iteritems() | |
| ''' | |
| keys = self.field('ma_keys') | |
| values = self.field('ma_values') | |
| entries, nentries = self._get_entries(keys) | |
| for i in safe_range(nentries): | |
| ep = entries[i] | |
| if long(values): | |
| pyop_value = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(values[i]) | |
| else: | |
| pyop_value = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(ep['me_value']) | |
| if not pyop_value.is_null(): | |
| pyop_key = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(ep['me_key']) | |
| yield (pyop_key, pyop_value) | |
| def proxyval(self, visited): | |
| # Guard against infinite loops: | |
| if self.as_address() in visited: | |
| return ProxyAlreadyVisited('{...}') | |
| visited.add(self.as_address()) | |
| result = {} | |
| for pyop_key, pyop_value in self.iteritems(): | |
| proxy_key = pyop_key.proxyval(visited) | |
| proxy_value = pyop_value.proxyval(visited) | |
| result[proxy_key] = proxy_value | |
| return result | |
| def write_repr(self, out, visited): | |
| # Guard against infinite loops: | |
| if self.as_address() in visited: | |
| out.write('{...}') | |
| return | |
| visited.add(self.as_address()) | |
| out.write('{') | |
| first = True | |
| for pyop_key, pyop_value in self.iteritems(): | |
| if not first: | |
| out.write(', ') | |
| first = False | |
| pyop_key.write_repr(out, visited) | |
| out.write(': ') | |
| pyop_value.write_repr(out, visited) | |
| out.write('}') | |
| def _get_entries(self, keys): | |
| dk_nentries = int(keys['dk_nentries']) | |
| dk_size = int(keys['dk_size']) | |
| try: | |
| # <= Python 3.5 | |
| return keys['dk_entries'], dk_size | |
| except RuntimeError: | |
| # >= Python 3.6 | |
| pass | |
| if dk_size <= 0xFF: | |
| offset = dk_size | |
| elif dk_size <= 0xFFFF: | |
| offset = 2 * dk_size | |
| elif dk_size <= 0xFFFFFFFF: | |
| offset = 4 * dk_size | |
| else: | |
| offset = 8 * dk_size | |
| ent_addr = keys['dk_indices']['as_1'].address | |
| ent_addr = ent_addr.cast(_type_unsigned_char_ptr()) + offset | |
| ent_ptr_t = gdb.lookup_type('PyDictKeyEntry').pointer() | |
| ent_addr = ent_addr.cast(ent_ptr_t) | |
| return ent_addr, dk_nentries | |
| class PyListObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| _typename = 'PyListObject' | |
| def __getitem__(self, i): | |
| # Get the gdb.Value for the (PyObject*) with the given index: | |
| field_ob_item = self.field('ob_item') | |
| return field_ob_item[i] | |
| def proxyval(self, visited): | |
| # Guard against infinite loops: | |
| if self.as_address() in visited: | |
| return ProxyAlreadyVisited('[...]') | |
| visited.add(self.as_address()) | |
| result = [PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self[i]).proxyval(visited) | |
| for i in safe_range(int_from_int(self.field('ob_size')))] | |
| return result | |
| def write_repr(self, out, visited): | |
| # Guard against infinite loops: | |
| if self.as_address() in visited: | |
| out.write('[...]') | |
| return | |
| visited.add(self.as_address()) | |
| out.write('[') | |
| for i in safe_range(int_from_int(self.field('ob_size'))): | |
| if i > 0: | |
| out.write(', ') | |
| element = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self[i]) | |
| element.write_repr(out, visited) | |
| out.write(']') | |
| class PyLongObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| _typename = 'PyLongObject' | |
| def proxyval(self, visited): | |
| ''' | |
| Python's Include/longobjrep.h has this declaration: | |
| struct _longobject { | |
| PyObject_VAR_HEAD | |
| digit ob_digit[1]; | |
| }; | |
| with this description: | |
| The absolute value of a number is equal to | |
| SUM(for i=0 through abs(ob_size)-1) ob_digit[i] * 2**(SHIFT*i) | |
| Negative numbers are represented with ob_size < 0; | |
| zero is represented by ob_size == 0. | |
| where SHIFT can be either: | |
| #define PyLong_SHIFT 30 | |
| #define PyLong_SHIFT 15 | |
| ''' | |
| ob_size = long(self.field('ob_size')) | |
| if ob_size == 0: | |
| return 0 | |
| ob_digit = self.field('ob_digit') | |
| if gdb.lookup_type('digit').sizeof == 2: | |
| SHIFT = 15 | |
| else: | |
| SHIFT = 30 | |
| digits = [long(ob_digit[i]) * 2**(SHIFT*i) | |
| for i in safe_range(abs(ob_size))] | |
| result = sum(digits) | |
| if ob_size < 0: | |
| result = -result | |
| return result | |
| def write_repr(self, out, visited): | |
| # Write this out as a Python 3 int literal, i.e. without the "L" suffix | |
| proxy = self.proxyval(visited) | |
| out.write("%s" % proxy) | |
| class PyBoolObjectPtr(PyLongObjectPtr): | |
| """ | |
| Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's a PyBoolObject* i.e. one of the two | |
| <bool> instances (Py_True/Py_False) within the process being debugged. | |
| """ | |
| def proxyval(self, visited): | |
| if PyLongObjectPtr.proxyval(self, visited): | |
| return True | |
| else: | |
| return False | |
| class PyNoneStructPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| """ | |
| Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's a PyObject* pointing to the | |
| singleton (we hope) _Py_NoneStruct with ob_type PyNone_Type | |
| """ | |
| _typename = 'PyObject' | |
| def proxyval(self, visited): | |
| return None | |
| class PyFrameObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| _typename = 'PyFrameObject' | |
| def __init__(self, gdbval, cast_to=None): | |
| PyObjectPtr.__init__(self, gdbval, cast_to) | |
| if not self.is_optimized_out(): | |
| self.co = PyCodeObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self.field('f_code')) | |
| self.co_name = self.co.pyop_field('co_name') | |
| self.co_filename = self.co.pyop_field('co_filename') | |
| self.f_lineno = int_from_int(self.field('f_lineno')) | |
| self.f_lasti = int_from_int(self.field('f_lasti')) | |
| self.co_nlocals = int_from_int(self.co.field('co_nlocals')) | |
| self.co_varnames = PyTupleObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self.co.field('co_varnames')) | |
| def iter_locals(self): | |
| ''' | |
| Yield a sequence of (name,value) pairs of PyObjectPtr instances, for | |
| the local variables of this frame | |
| ''' | |
| if self.is_optimized_out(): | |
| return | |
| f_localsplus = self.field('f_localsplus') | |
| for i in safe_range(self.co_nlocals): | |
| pyop_value = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(f_localsplus[i]) | |
| if not pyop_value.is_null(): | |
| pyop_name = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self.co_varnames[i]) | |
| yield (pyop_name, pyop_value) | |
| def iter_globals(self): | |
| ''' | |
| Yield a sequence of (name,value) pairs of PyObjectPtr instances, for | |
| the global variables of this frame | |
| ''' | |
| if self.is_optimized_out(): | |
| return () | |
| pyop_globals = self.pyop_field('f_globals') | |
| return pyop_globals.iteritems() | |
| def iter_builtins(self): | |
| ''' | |
| Yield a sequence of (name,value) pairs of PyObjectPtr instances, for | |
| the builtin variables | |
| ''' | |
| if self.is_optimized_out(): | |
| return () | |
| pyop_builtins = self.pyop_field('f_builtins') | |
| return pyop_builtins.iteritems() | |
| def get_var_by_name(self, name): | |
| ''' | |
| Look for the named local variable, returning a (PyObjectPtr, scope) pair | |
| where scope is a string 'local', 'global', 'builtin' | |
| If not found, return (None, None) | |
| ''' | |
| for pyop_name, pyop_value in self.iter_locals(): | |
| if name == pyop_name.proxyval(set()): | |
| return pyop_value, 'local' | |
| for pyop_name, pyop_value in self.iter_globals(): | |
| if name == pyop_name.proxyval(set()): | |
| return pyop_value, 'global' | |
| for pyop_name, pyop_value in self.iter_builtins(): | |
| if name == pyop_name.proxyval(set()): | |
| return pyop_value, 'builtin' | |
| return None, None | |
| def filename(self): | |
| '''Get the path of the current Python source file, as a string''' | |
| if self.is_optimized_out(): | |
| return '(frame information optimized out)' | |
| return self.co_filename.proxyval(set()) | |
| def current_line_num(self): | |
| '''Get current line number as an integer (1-based) | |
| Translated from PyFrame_GetLineNumber and PyCode_Addr2Line | |
| See Objects/lnotab_notes.txt | |
| ''' | |
| if self.is_optimized_out(): | |
| return None | |
| f_trace = self.field('f_trace') | |
| if long(f_trace) != 0: | |
| # we have a non-NULL f_trace: | |
| return self.f_lineno | |
| else: | |
| #try: | |
| return self.co.addr2line(self.f_lasti) | |
| #except ValueError: | |
| # return self.f_lineno | |
| def current_line(self): | |
| '''Get the text of the current source line as a string, with a trailing | |
| newline character''' | |
| if self.is_optimized_out(): | |
| return '(frame information optimized out)' | |
| filename = self.filename() | |
| try: | |
| f = open(os_fsencode(filename), 'r') | |
| except IOError: | |
| return None | |
| with f: | |
| all_lines = f.readlines() | |
| # Convert from 1-based current_line_num to 0-based list offset: | |
| return all_lines[self.current_line_num()-1] | |
| def write_repr(self, out, visited): | |
| if self.is_optimized_out(): | |
| out.write('(frame information optimized out)') | |
| return | |
| out.write('Frame 0x%x, for file %s, line %i, in %s (' | |
| % (self.as_address(), | |
| self.co_filename.proxyval(visited), | |
| self.current_line_num(), | |
| self.co_name.proxyval(visited))) | |
| first = True | |
| for pyop_name, pyop_value in self.iter_locals(): | |
| if not first: | |
| out.write(', ') | |
| first = False | |
| out.write(pyop_name.proxyval(visited)) | |
| out.write('=') | |
| pyop_value.write_repr(out, visited) | |
| out.write(')') | |
| def print_traceback(self): | |
| if self.is_optimized_out(): | |
| sys.stdout.write(' (frame information optimized out)\n') | |
| return | |
| visited = set() | |
| sys.stdout.write(' File "%s", line %i, in %s\n' | |
| % (self.co_filename.proxyval(visited), | |
| self.current_line_num(), | |
| self.co_name.proxyval(visited))) | |
| class PySetObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| _typename = 'PySetObject' | |
| def _dummy_key(self): | |
| return gdb.lookup_global_symbol('_PySet_Dummy').value() | |
| def __iter__(self): | |
| dummy_ptr = self._dummy_key() | |
| table = self.field('table') | |
| for i in safe_range(self.field('mask') + 1): | |
| setentry = table[i] | |
| key = setentry['key'] | |
| if key != 0 and key != dummy_ptr: | |
| yield PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(key) | |
| def proxyval(self, visited): | |
| # Guard against infinite loops: | |
| if self.as_address() in visited: | |
| return ProxyAlreadyVisited('%s(...)' % self.safe_tp_name()) | |
| visited.add(self.as_address()) | |
| members = (key.proxyval(visited) for key in self) | |
| if self.safe_tp_name() == 'frozenset': | |
| return frozenset(members) | |
| else: | |
| return set(members) | |
| def write_repr(self, out, visited): | |
| # Emulate Python 3's set_repr | |
| tp_name = self.safe_tp_name() | |
| # Guard against infinite loops: | |
| if self.as_address() in visited: | |
| out.write('(...)') | |
| return | |
| visited.add(self.as_address()) | |
| # Python 3's set_repr special-cases the empty set: | |
| if not self.field('used'): | |
| out.write(tp_name) | |
| out.write('()') | |
| return | |
| # Python 3 uses {} for set literals: | |
| if tp_name != 'set': | |
| out.write(tp_name) | |
| out.write('(') | |
| out.write('{') | |
| first = True | |
| for key in self: | |
| if not first: | |
| out.write(', ') | |
| first = False | |
| key.write_repr(out, visited) | |
| out.write('}') | |
| if tp_name != 'set': | |
| out.write(')') | |
| class PyBytesObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| _typename = 'PyBytesObject' | |
| def __str__(self): | |
| field_ob_size = self.field('ob_size') | |
| field_ob_sval = self.field('ob_sval') | |
| char_ptr = field_ob_sval.address.cast(_type_unsigned_char_ptr()) | |
| return ''.join([chr(char_ptr[i]) for i in safe_range(field_ob_size)]) | |
| def proxyval(self, visited): | |
| return str(self) | |
| def write_repr(self, out, visited): | |
| # Write this out as a Python 3 bytes literal, i.e. with a "b" prefix | |
| # Get a PyStringObject* within the Python 2 gdb process: | |
| proxy = self.proxyval(visited) | |
| # Transliteration of Python 3's Objects/bytesobject.c:PyBytes_Repr | |
| # to Python 2 code: | |
| quote = "'" | |
| if "'" in proxy and not '"' in proxy: | |
| quote = '"' | |
| out.write('b') | |
| out.write(quote) | |
| for byte in proxy: | |
| if byte == quote or byte == '\\': | |
| out.write('\\') | |
| out.write(byte) | |
| elif byte == '\t': | |
| out.write('\\t') | |
| elif byte == '\n': | |
| out.write('\\n') | |
| elif byte == '\r': | |
| out.write('\\r') | |
| elif byte < ' ' or ord(byte) >= 0x7f: | |
| out.write('\\x') | |
| out.write(hexdigits[(ord(byte) & 0xf0) >> 4]) | |
| out.write(hexdigits[ord(byte) & 0xf]) | |
| else: | |
| out.write(byte) | |
| out.write(quote) | |
| class PyStringObjectPtr(PyBytesObjectPtr): | |
| _typename = 'PyStringObject' | |
| class PyTupleObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| _typename = 'PyTupleObject' | |
| def __getitem__(self, i): | |
| # Get the gdb.Value for the (PyObject*) with the given index: | |
| field_ob_item = self.field('ob_item') | |
| return field_ob_item[i] | |
| def proxyval(self, visited): | |
| # Guard against infinite loops: | |
| if self.as_address() in visited: | |
| return ProxyAlreadyVisited('(...)') | |
| visited.add(self.as_address()) | |
| result = tuple(PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self[i]).proxyval(visited) | |
| for i in safe_range(int_from_int(self.field('ob_size')))) | |
| return result | |
| def write_repr(self, out, visited): | |
| # Guard against infinite loops: | |
| if self.as_address() in visited: | |
| out.write('(...)') | |
| return | |
| visited.add(self.as_address()) | |
| out.write('(') | |
| for i in safe_range(int_from_int(self.field('ob_size'))): | |
| if i > 0: | |
| out.write(', ') | |
| element = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self[i]) | |
| element.write_repr(out, visited) | |
| if self.field('ob_size') == 1: | |
| out.write(',)') | |
| else: | |
| out.write(')') | |
| class PyTypeObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| _typename = 'PyTypeObject' | |
| def _unichr_is_printable(char): | |
| # Logic adapted from Python 3's Tools/unicode/makeunicodedata.py | |
| if char == u" ": | |
| return True | |
| import unicodedata | |
| return unicodedata.category(char) not in ("C", "Z") | |
| if sys.maxunicode >= 0x10000: | |
| _unichr = unichr | |
| else: | |
| # Needed for proper surrogate support if sizeof(Py_UNICODE) is 2 in gdb | |
| def _unichr(x): | |
| if x < 0x10000: | |
| return unichr(x) | |
| x -= 0x10000 | |
| ch1 = 0xD800 | (x >> 10) | |
| ch2 = 0xDC00 | (x & 0x3FF) | |
| return unichr(ch1) + unichr(ch2) | |
| class PyUnicodeObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr): | |
| _typename = 'PyUnicodeObject' | |
| def char_width(self): | |
| _type_Py_UNICODE = gdb.lookup_type('Py_UNICODE') | |
| return _type_Py_UNICODE.sizeof | |
| def proxyval(self, visited): | |
| global _is_pep393 | |
| if _is_pep393 is None: | |
| fields = gdb.lookup_type('PyUnicodeObject').target().fields() | |
| _is_pep393 = 'data' in [f.name for f in fields] | |
| if _is_pep393: | |
| # Python 3.3 and newer | |
| may_have_surrogates = False | |
| compact = self.field('_base') | |
| ascii = compact['_base'] | |
| state = ascii['state'] | |
| is_compact_ascii = (int(state['ascii']) and int(state['compact'])) | |
| if not int(state['ready']): | |
| # string is not ready | |
| field_length = long(compact['wstr_length']) | |
| may_have_surrogates = True | |
| field_str = ascii['wstr'] | |
| else: | |
| field_length = long(ascii['length']) | |
| if is_compact_ascii: | |
| field_str = ascii.address + 1 | |
| elif int(state['compact']): | |
| field_str = compact.address + 1 | |
| else: | |
| field_str = self.field('data')['any'] | |
| repr_kind = int(state['kind']) | |
| if repr_kind == 1: | |
| field_str = field_str.cast(_type_unsigned_char_ptr()) | |
| elif repr_kind == 2: | |
| field_str = field_str.cast(_type_unsigned_short_ptr()) | |
| elif repr_kind == 4: | |
| field_str = field_str.cast(_type_unsigned_int_ptr()) | |
| else: | |
| # Python 3.2 and earlier | |
| field_length = long(self.field('length')) | |
| field_str = self.field('str') | |
| may_have_surrogates = self.char_width() == 2 | |
| # Gather a list of ints from the Py_UNICODE array; these are either | |
| # UCS-1, UCS-2 or UCS-4 code points: | |
| if not may_have_surrogates: | |
| Py_UNICODEs = [int(field_str[i]) for i in safe_range(field_length)] | |
| else: | |
| # A more elaborate routine if sizeof(Py_UNICODE) is 2 in the | |
| # inferior process: we must join surrogate pairs. | |
| Py_UNICODEs = [] | |
| i = 0 | |
| limit = safety_limit(field_length) | |
| while i < limit: | |
| ucs = int(field_str[i]) | |
| i += 1 | |
| if ucs < 0xD800 or ucs >= 0xDC00 or i == field_length: | |
| Py_UNICODEs.append(ucs) | |
| continue | |
| # This could be a surrogate pair. | |
| ucs2 = int(field_str[i]) | |
| if ucs2 < 0xDC00 or ucs2 > 0xDFFF: | |
| continue | |
| code = (ucs & 0x03FF) << 10 | |
| code |= ucs2 & 0x03FF | |
| code += 0x00010000 | |
| Py_UNICODEs.append(code) | |
| i += 1 | |
| # Convert the int code points to unicode characters, and generate a | |
| # local unicode instance. | |
| # This splits surrogate pairs if sizeof(Py_UNICODE) is 2 here (in gdb). | |
| result = u''.join([ | |
| (_unichr(ucs) if ucs <= 0x10ffff else '\ufffd') | |
| for ucs in Py_UNICODEs]) | |
| return result | |
| def write_repr(self, out, visited): | |
| # Write this out as a Python 3 str literal, i.e. without a "u" prefix | |
| # Get a PyUnicodeObject* within the Python 2 gdb process: | |
| proxy = self.proxyval(visited) | |
| # Transliteration of Python 3's Object/unicodeobject.c:unicode_repr | |
| # to Python 2: | |
| if "'" in proxy and '"' not in proxy: | |
| quote = '"' | |
| else: | |
| quote = "'" | |
| out.write(quote) | |
| i = 0 | |
| while i < len(proxy): | |
| ch = proxy[i] | |
| i += 1 | |
| # Escape quotes and backslashes | |
| if ch == quote or ch == '\\': | |
| out.write('\\') | |
| out.write(ch) | |
| # Map special whitespace to '\t', \n', '\r' | |
| elif ch == '\t': | |
| out.write('\\t') | |
| elif ch == '\n': | |
| out.write('\\n') | |
| elif ch == '\r': | |
| out.write('\\r') | |
| # Map non-printable US ASCII to '\xhh' */ | |
| elif ch < ' ' or ch == 0x7F: | |
| out.write('\\x') | |
| out.write(hexdigits[(ord(ch) >> 4) & 0x000F]) | |
| out.write(hexdigits[ord(ch) & 0x000F]) | |
| # Copy ASCII characters as-is | |
| elif ord(ch) < 0x7F: | |
| out.write(ch) | |
| # Non-ASCII characters | |
| else: | |
| ucs = ch | |
| ch2 = None | |
| if sys.maxunicode < 0x10000: | |
| # If sizeof(Py_UNICODE) is 2 here (in gdb), join | |
| # surrogate pairs before calling _unichr_is_printable. | |
| if (i < len(proxy) | |
| and 0xD800 <= ord(ch) < 0xDC00 \ | |
| and 0xDC00 <= ord(proxy[i]) <= 0xDFFF): | |
| ch2 = proxy[i] | |
| ucs = ch + ch2 | |
| i += 1 | |
| # Unfortuately, Python 2's unicode type doesn't seem | |
| # to expose the "isprintable" method | |
| printable = _unichr_is_printable(ucs) | |
| if printable: | |
| try: | |
| ucs.encode(ENCODING) | |
| except UnicodeEncodeError: | |
| printable = False | |
| # Map Unicode whitespace and control characters | |
| # (categories Z* and C* except ASCII space) | |
| if not printable: | |
| if ch2 is not None: | |
| # Match Python 3's representation of non-printable | |
| # wide characters. | |
| code = (ord(ch) & 0x03FF) << 10 | |
| code |= ord(ch2) & 0x03FF | |
| code += 0x00010000 | |
| else: | |
| code = ord(ucs) | |
| # Map 8-bit characters to '\\xhh' | |
| if code <= 0xff: | |
| out.write('\\x') | |
| out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 4) & 0x000F]) | |
| out.write(hexdigits[code & 0x000F]) | |
| # Map 21-bit characters to '\U00xxxxxx' | |
| elif code >= 0x10000: | |
| out.write('\\U') | |
| out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 28) & 0x0000000F]) | |
| out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 24) & 0x0000000F]) | |
| out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 20) & 0x0000000F]) | |
| out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 16) & 0x0000000F]) | |
| out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 12) & 0x0000000F]) | |
| out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 8) & 0x0000000F]) | |
| out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 4) & 0x0000000F]) | |
| out.write(hexdigits[code & 0x0000000F]) | |
| # Map 16-bit characters to '\uxxxx' | |
| else: | |
| out.write('\\u') | |
| out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 12) & 0x000F]) | |
| out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 8) & 0x000F]) | |
| out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 4) & 0x000F]) | |
| out.write(hexdigits[code & 0x000F]) | |
| else: | |
| # Copy characters as-is | |
| out.write(ch) | |
| if ch2 is not None: | |
| out.write(ch2) | |
| out.write(quote) | |
| class wrapperobject(PyObjectPtr): | |
| _typename = 'wrapperobject' | |
| def safe_name(self): | |
| try: | |
| name = self.field('descr')['d_base']['name'].string() | |
| return repr(name) | |
| except (NullPyObjectPtr, RuntimeError): | |
| return '<unknown name>' | |
| def safe_tp_name(self): | |
| try: | |
| return self.field('self')['ob_type']['tp_name'].string() | |
| except (NullPyObjectPtr, RuntimeError): | |
| return '<unknown tp_name>' | |
| def safe_self_addresss(self): | |
| try: | |
| address = long(self.field('self')) | |
| return '%#x' % address | |
| except (NullPyObjectPtr, RuntimeError): | |
| return '<failed to get self address>' | |
| def proxyval(self, visited): | |
| name = self.safe_name() | |
| tp_name = self.safe_tp_name() | |
| self_address = self.safe_self_addresss() | |
| return ("<method-wrapper %s of %s object at %s>" | |
| % (name, tp_name, self_address)) | |
| def write_repr(self, out, visited): | |
| proxy = self.proxyval(visited) | |
| out.write(proxy) | |
| def int_from_int(gdbval): | |
| return int(str(gdbval)) | |
| def stringify(val): | |
| # TODO: repr() puts everything on one line; pformat can be nicer, but | |
| # can lead to v.long results; this function isolates the choice | |
| if True: | |
| return repr(val) | |
| else: | |
| from pprint import pformat | |
| return pformat(val) | |
| class PyObjectPtrPrinter: | |
| "Prints a (PyObject*)" | |
| def __init__ (self, gdbval): | |
| self.gdbval = gdbval | |
| def to_string (self): | |
| pyop = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self.gdbval) | |
| if True: | |
| return pyop.get_truncated_repr(MAX_OUTPUT_LEN) | |
| else: | |
| # Generate full proxy value then stringify it. | |
| # Doing so could be expensive | |
| proxyval = pyop.proxyval(set()) | |
| return stringify(proxyval) | |
| def pretty_printer_lookup(gdbval): | |
| type = gdbval.type.unqualified() | |
| if type.code != gdb.TYPE_CODE_PTR: | |
| return None | |
| type = type.target().unqualified() | |
| t = str(type) | |
| if t in ("PyObject", "PyFrameObject", "PyUnicodeObject", "wrapperobject"): | |
| return PyObjectPtrPrinter(gdbval) | |
| """ | |
| During development, I've been manually invoking the code in this way: | |
| (gdb) python | |
| import sys | |
| sys.path.append('/home/david/coding/python-gdb') | |
| import libpython | |
| end | |
| then reloading it after each edit like this: | |
| (gdb) python reload(libpython) | |
| The following code should ensure that the prettyprinter is registered | |
| if the code is autoloaded by gdb when visiting libpython.so, provided | |
| that this python file is installed to the same path as the library (or its | |
| .debug file) plus a "-gdb.py" suffix, e.g: | |
| /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0-gdb.py | |
| /usr/lib/debug/usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0.debug-gdb.py | |
| """ | |
| def register (obj): | |
| if obj is None: | |
| obj = gdb | |
| # Wire up the pretty-printer | |
| obj.pretty_printers.append(pretty_printer_lookup) | |
| register (gdb.current_objfile ()) | |
| # Unfortunately, the exact API exposed by the gdb module varies somewhat | |
| # from build to build | |
| # See http://bugs.python.org/issue8279?#msg102276 | |
| class Frame(object): | |
| ''' | |
| Wrapper for gdb.Frame, adding various methods | |
| ''' | |
| def __init__(self, gdbframe): | |
| self._gdbframe = gdbframe | |
| def older(self): | |
| older = self._gdbframe.older() | |
| if older: | |
| return Frame(older) | |
| else: | |
| return None | |
| def newer(self): | |
| newer = self._gdbframe.newer() | |
| if newer: | |
| return Frame(newer) | |
| else: | |
| return None | |
| def select(self): | |
| '''If supported, select this frame and return True; return False if unsupported | |
| Not all builds have a gdb.Frame.select method; seems to be present on Fedora 12 | |
| onwards, but absent on Ubuntu buildbot''' | |
| if not hasattr(self._gdbframe, 'select'): | |
| print ('Unable to select frame: ' | |
| 'this build of gdb does not expose a gdb.Frame.select method') | |
| return False | |
| self._gdbframe.select() | |
| return True | |
| def get_index(self): | |
| '''Calculate index of frame, starting at 0 for the newest frame within | |
| this thread''' | |
| index = 0 | |
| # Go down until you reach the newest frame: | |
| iter_frame = self | |
| while iter_frame.newer(): | |
| index += 1 | |
| iter_frame = iter_frame.newer() | |
| return index | |
| # We divide frames into: | |
| # - "python frames": | |
| # - "bytecode frames" i.e. PyEval_EvalFrameEx | |
| # - "other python frames": things that are of interest from a python | |
| # POV, but aren't bytecode (e.g. GC, GIL) | |
| # - everything else | |
| def is_python_frame(self): | |
| '''Is this a _PyEval_EvalFrameDefault frame, or some other important | |
| frame? (see is_other_python_frame for what "important" means in this | |
| context)''' | |
| if self.is_evalframe(): | |
| return True | |
| if self.is_other_python_frame(): | |
| return True | |
| return False | |
| def is_evalframe(self): | |
| '''Is this a _PyEval_EvalFrameDefault frame?''' | |
| if self._gdbframe.name() == EVALFRAME: | |
| ''' | |
| I believe we also need to filter on the inline | |
| struct frame_id.inline_depth, only regarding frames with | |
| an inline depth of 0 as actually being this function | |
| So we reject those with type gdb.INLINE_FRAME | |
| ''' | |
| if self._gdbframe.type() == gdb.NORMAL_FRAME: | |
| # We have a _PyEval_EvalFrameDefault frame: | |
| return True | |
| return False | |
| def is_other_python_frame(self): | |
| '''Is this frame worth displaying in python backtraces? | |
| Examples: | |
| - waiting on the GIL | |
| - garbage-collecting | |
| - within a CFunction | |
| If it is, return a descriptive string | |
| For other frames, return False | |
| ''' | |
| if self.is_waiting_for_gil(): | |
| return 'Waiting for the GIL' | |
| if self.is_gc_collect(): | |
| return 'Garbage-collecting' | |
| # Detect invocations of PyCFunction instances: | |
| frame = self._gdbframe | |
| caller = frame.name() | |
| if not caller: | |
| return False | |
| if caller in ('_PyCFunction_FastCallDict', | |
| '_PyCFunction_FastCallKeywords'): | |
| arg_name = 'func' | |
| # Within that frame: | |
| # "func" is the local containing the PyObject* of the | |
| # PyCFunctionObject instance | |
| # "f" is the same value, but cast to (PyCFunctionObject*) | |
| # "self" is the (PyObject*) of the 'self' | |
| try: | |
| # Use the prettyprinter for the func: | |
| func = frame.read_var(arg_name) | |
| return str(func) | |
| except RuntimeError: | |
| return 'PyCFunction invocation (unable to read %s)' % arg_name | |
| if caller == 'wrapper_call': | |
| try: | |
| func = frame.read_var('wp') | |
| return str(func) | |
| except RuntimeError: | |
| return '<wrapper_call invocation>' | |
| # This frame isn't worth reporting: | |
| return False | |
| def is_waiting_for_gil(self): | |
| '''Is this frame waiting on the GIL?''' | |
| # This assumes the _POSIX_THREADS version of Python/ceval_gil.h: | |
| name = self._gdbframe.name() | |
| if name: | |
| return 'pthread_cond_timedwait' in name | |
| def is_gc_collect(self): | |
| '''Is this frame "collect" within the garbage-collector?''' | |
| return self._gdbframe.name() == 'collect' | |
| def get_pyop(self): | |
| try: | |
| f = self._gdbframe.read_var('f') | |
| frame = PyFrameObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(f) | |
| if not frame.is_optimized_out(): | |
| return frame | |
| # gdb is unable to get the "f" argument of PyEval_EvalFrameEx() | |
| # because it was "optimized out". Try to get "f" from the frame | |
| # of the caller, PyEval_EvalCodeEx(). | |
| orig_frame = frame | |
| caller = self._gdbframe.older() | |
| if caller: | |
| f = caller.read_var('f') | |
| frame = PyFrameObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(f) | |
| if not frame.is_optimized_out(): | |
| return frame | |
| return orig_frame | |
| except ValueError: | |
| return None | |
| def get_selected_frame(cls): | |
| _gdbframe = gdb.selected_frame() | |
| if _gdbframe: | |
| return Frame(_gdbframe) | |
| return None | |
| def get_selected_python_frame(cls): | |
| '''Try to obtain the Frame for the python-related code in the selected | |
| frame, or None''' | |
| try: | |
| frame = cls.get_selected_frame() | |
| except gdb.error: | |
| # No frame: Python didn't start yet | |
| return None | |
| while frame: | |
| if frame.is_python_frame(): | |
| return frame | |
| frame = frame.older() | |
| # Not found: | |
| return None | |
| def get_selected_bytecode_frame(cls): | |
| '''Try to obtain the Frame for the python bytecode interpreter in the | |
| selected GDB frame, or None''' | |
| frame = cls.get_selected_frame() | |
| while frame: | |
| if frame.is_evalframe(): | |
| return frame | |
| frame = frame.older() | |
| # Not found: | |
| return None | |
| def print_summary(self): | |
| if self.is_evalframe(): | |
| pyop = self.get_pyop() | |
| if pyop: | |
| line = pyop.get_truncated_repr(MAX_OUTPUT_LEN) | |
| write_unicode(sys.stdout, '#%i %s\n' % (self.get_index(), line)) | |
| if not pyop.is_optimized_out(): | |
| line = pyop.current_line() | |
| if line is not None: | |
| sys.stdout.write(' %s\n' % line.strip()) | |
| else: | |
| sys.stdout.write('#%i (unable to read python frame information)\n' % self.get_index()) | |
| else: | |
| info = self.is_other_python_frame() | |
| if info: | |
| sys.stdout.write('#%i %s\n' % (self.get_index(), info)) | |
| else: | |
| sys.stdout.write('#%i\n' % self.get_index()) | |
| def print_traceback(self): | |
| if self.is_evalframe(): | |
| pyop = self.get_pyop() | |
| if pyop: | |
| pyop.print_traceback() | |
| if not pyop.is_optimized_out(): | |
| line = pyop.current_line() | |
| if line is not None: | |
| sys.stdout.write(' %s\n' % line.strip()) | |
| else: | |
| sys.stdout.write(' (unable to read python frame information)\n') | |
| else: | |
| info = self.is_other_python_frame() | |
| if info: | |
| sys.stdout.write(' %s\n' % info) | |
| else: | |
| sys.stdout.write(' (not a python frame)\n') | |
| class PyList(gdb.Command): | |
| '''List the current Python source code, if any | |
| Use | |
| py-list START | |
| to list at a different line number within the python source. | |
| Use | |
| py-list START, END | |
| to list a specific range of lines within the python source. | |
| ''' | |
| def __init__(self): | |
| gdb.Command.__init__ (self, | |
| "py-list", | |
| gdb.COMMAND_FILES, | |
| gdb.COMPLETE_NONE) | |
| def invoke(self, args, from_tty): | |
| import re | |
| start = None | |
| end = None | |
| m = re.match(r'\s*(\d+)\s*', args) | |
| if m: | |
| start = int(m.group(0)) | |
| end = start + 10 | |
| m = re.match(r'\s*(\d+)\s*,\s*(\d+)\s*', args) | |
| if m: | |
| start, end = map(int, m.groups()) | |
| # py-list requires an actual PyEval_EvalFrameEx frame: | |
| frame = Frame.get_selected_bytecode_frame() | |
| if not frame: | |
| print('Unable to locate gdb frame for python bytecode interpreter') | |
| return | |
| pyop = frame.get_pyop() | |
| if not pyop or pyop.is_optimized_out(): | |
| print('Unable to read information on python frame') | |
| return | |
| filename = pyop.filename() | |
| lineno = pyop.current_line_num() | |
| if start is None: | |
| start = lineno - 5 | |
| end = lineno + 5 | |
| if start<1: | |
| start = 1 | |
| try: | |
| f = open(os_fsencode(filename), 'r') | |
| except IOError as err: | |
| sys.stdout.write('Unable to open %s: %s\n' | |
| % (filename, err)) | |
| return | |
| with f: | |
| all_lines = f.readlines() | |
| # start and end are 1-based, all_lines is 0-based; | |
| # so [start-1:end] as a python slice gives us [start, end] as a | |
| # closed interval | |
| for i, line in enumerate(all_lines[start-1:end]): | |
| linestr = str(i+start) | |
| # Highlight current line: | |
| if i + start == lineno: | |
| linestr = '>' + linestr | |
| sys.stdout.write('%4s %s' % (linestr, line)) | |
| # ...and register the command: | |
| PyList() | |
| def move_in_stack(move_up): | |
| '''Move up or down the stack (for the py-up/py-down command)''' | |
| frame = Frame.get_selected_python_frame() | |
| if not frame: | |
| print('Unable to locate python frame') | |
| return | |
| while frame: | |
| if move_up: | |
| iter_frame = frame.older() | |
| else: | |
| iter_frame = frame.newer() | |
| if not iter_frame: | |
| break | |
| if iter_frame.is_python_frame(): | |
| # Result: | |
| if iter_frame.select(): | |
| iter_frame.print_summary() | |
| return | |
| frame = iter_frame | |
| if move_up: | |
| print('Unable to find an older python frame') | |
| else: | |
| print('Unable to find a newer python frame') | |
| class PyUp(gdb.Command): | |
| 'Select and print the python stack frame that called this one (if any)' | |
| def __init__(self): | |
| gdb.Command.__init__ (self, | |
| "py-up", | |
| gdb.COMMAND_STACK, | |
| gdb.COMPLETE_NONE) | |
| def invoke(self, args, from_tty): | |
| move_in_stack(move_up=True) | |
| class PyDown(gdb.Command): | |
| 'Select and print the python stack frame called by this one (if any)' | |
| def __init__(self): | |
| gdb.Command.__init__ (self, | |
| "py-down", | |
| gdb.COMMAND_STACK, | |
| gdb.COMPLETE_NONE) | |
| def invoke(self, args, from_tty): | |
| move_in_stack(move_up=False) | |
| # Not all builds of gdb have gdb.Frame.select | |
| if hasattr(gdb.Frame, 'select'): | |
| PyUp() | |
| PyDown() | |
| class PyBacktraceFull(gdb.Command): | |
| 'Display the current python frame and all the frames within its call stack (if any)' | |
| def __init__(self): | |
| gdb.Command.__init__ (self, | |
| "py-bt-full", | |
| gdb.COMMAND_STACK, | |
| gdb.COMPLETE_NONE) | |
| def invoke(self, args, from_tty): | |
| frame = Frame.get_selected_python_frame() | |
| if not frame: | |
| print('Unable to locate python frame') | |
| return | |
| while frame: | |
| if frame.is_python_frame(): | |
| frame.print_summary() | |
| frame = frame.older() | |
| PyBacktraceFull() | |
| class PyBacktrace(gdb.Command): | |
| 'Display the current python frame and all the frames within its call stack (if any)' | |
| def __init__(self): | |
| gdb.Command.__init__ (self, | |
| "py-bt", | |
| gdb.COMMAND_STACK, | |
| gdb.COMPLETE_NONE) | |
| def invoke(self, args, from_tty): | |
| frame = Frame.get_selected_python_frame() | |
| if not frame: | |
| print('Unable to locate python frame') | |
| return | |
| sys.stdout.write('Traceback (most recent call first):\n') | |
| while frame: | |
| if frame.is_python_frame(): | |
| frame.print_traceback() | |
| frame = frame.older() | |
| PyBacktrace() | |
| class PyPrint(gdb.Command): | |
| 'Look up the given python variable name, and print it' | |
| def __init__(self): | |
| gdb.Command.__init__ (self, | |
| "py-print", | |
| gdb.COMMAND_DATA, | |
| gdb.COMPLETE_NONE) | |
| def invoke(self, args, from_tty): | |
| name = str(args) | |
| frame = Frame.get_selected_python_frame() | |
| if not frame: | |
| print('Unable to locate python frame') | |
| return | |
| pyop_frame = frame.get_pyop() | |
| if not pyop_frame: | |
| print('Unable to read information on python frame') | |
| return | |
| pyop_var, scope = pyop_frame.get_var_by_name(name) | |
| if pyop_var: | |
| print('%s %r = %s' | |
| % (scope, | |
| name, | |
| pyop_var.get_truncated_repr(MAX_OUTPUT_LEN))) | |
| else: | |
| print('%r not found' % name) | |
| PyPrint() | |
| class PyLocals(gdb.Command): | |
| 'Look up the given python variable name, and print it' | |
| def __init__(self, command="py-locals"): | |
| gdb.Command.__init__ (self, | |
| command, | |
| gdb.COMMAND_DATA, | |
| gdb.COMPLETE_NONE) | |
| def invoke(self, args, from_tty): | |
| name = str(args) | |
| frame = Frame.get_selected_python_frame() | |
| if not frame: | |
| print('Unable to locate python frame') | |
| return | |
| pyop_frame = frame.get_pyop() | |
| if not pyop_frame: | |
| print('Unable to read information on python frame') | |
| return | |
| namespace = self.get_namespace(pyop_frame) | |
| namespace = [(name.proxyval(set()), val) for name, val in namespace] | |
| if namespace: | |
| name, val = max(namespace, key=lambda item: len(item[0])) | |
| max_name_length = len(name) | |
| for name, pyop_value in namespace: | |
| value = pyop_value.get_truncated_repr(MAX_OUTPUT_LEN) | |
| print('%-*s = %s' % (max_name_length, name, value)) | |
| def get_namespace(self, pyop_frame): | |
| return pyop_frame.iter_locals() | |
| PyLocals() | |
| ################################################################## | |
| ## added, not in CPython | |
| ################################################################## | |
| import re | |
| import warnings | |
| import tempfile | |
| import textwrap | |
| import itertools | |
| class PyGlobals(PyLocals): | |
| 'List all the globals in the currently select Python frame' | |
| def get_namespace(self, pyop_frame): | |
| return pyop_frame.iter_globals() | |
| PyGlobals("py-globals") | |
| class PyNameEquals(gdb.Function): | |
| def _get_pycurframe_attr(self, attr): | |
| frame = Frame(gdb.selected_frame()) | |
| if frame.is_evalframeex(): | |
| pyframe = frame.get_pyop() | |
| if pyframe is None: | |
| warnings.warn("Use a Python debug build, Python breakpoints " | |
| "won't work otherwise.") | |
| return None | |
| return getattr(pyframe, attr).proxyval(set()) | |
| return None | |
| def invoke(self, funcname): | |
| attr = self._get_pycurframe_attr('co_name') | |
| return attr is not None and attr == funcname.string() | |
| PyNameEquals("pyname_equals") | |
| class PyModEquals(PyNameEquals): | |
| def invoke(self, modname): | |
| attr = self._get_pycurframe_attr('co_filename') | |
| if attr is not None: | |
| filename, ext = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(attr)) | |
| return filename == modname.string() | |
| return False | |
| PyModEquals("pymod_equals") | |
| class PyBreak(gdb.Command): | |
| """ | |
| Set a Python breakpoint. Examples: | |
| Break on any function or method named 'func' in module 'modname' | |
| py-break modname.func | |
| Break on any function or method named 'func' | |
| py-break func | |
| """ | |
| def invoke(self, funcname, from_tty): | |
| if '.' in funcname: | |
| modname, dot, funcname = funcname.rpartition('.') | |
| cond = '$pyname_equals("%s") && $pymod_equals("%s")' % (funcname, | |
| modname) | |
| else: | |
| cond = '$pyname_equals("%s")' % funcname | |
| gdb.execute('break PyEval_EvalFrameEx if ' + cond) | |
| PyBreak("py-break", gdb.COMMAND_RUNNING, gdb.COMPLETE_NONE) | |
| class _LoggingState(object): | |
| """ | |
| State that helps to provide a reentrant gdb.execute() function. | |
| """ | |
| def __init__(self): | |
| f = tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile('r+') | |
| self.file = f | |
| self.filename = f.name | |
| self.fd = f.fileno() | |
| _execute("set logging file %s" % self.filename) | |
| self.file_position_stack = [] | |
| def __enter__(self): | |
| if not self.file_position_stack: | |
| _execute("set logging redirect on") | |
| _execute("set logging on") | |
| _execute("set pagination off") | |
| self.file_position_stack.append(os.fstat(self.fd).st_size) | |
| return self | |
| def getoutput(self): | |
| gdb.flush() | |
| self.file.seek(self.file_position_stack[-1]) | |
| result = self.file.read() | |
| return result | |
| def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, tb): | |
| startpos = self.file_position_stack.pop() | |
| self.file.seek(startpos) | |
| self.file.truncate() | |
| if not self.file_position_stack: | |
| _execute("set logging off") | |
| _execute("set logging redirect off") | |
| _execute("set pagination on") | |
| def execute(command, from_tty=False, to_string=False): | |
| """ | |
| Replace gdb.execute() with this function and have it accept a 'to_string' | |
| argument (new in 7.2). Have it properly capture stderr also. Ensure | |
| reentrancy. | |
| """ | |
| if to_string: | |
| with _logging_state as state: | |
| _execute(command, from_tty) | |
| return state.getoutput() | |
| else: | |
| _execute(command, from_tty) | |
| _execute = gdb.execute | |
| gdb.execute = execute | |
| _logging_state = _LoggingState() | |
| def get_selected_inferior(): | |
| """ | |
| Return the selected inferior in gdb. | |
| """ | |
| # Woooh, another bug in gdb! Is there an end in sight? | |
| # http://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=12212 | |
| return gdb.inferiors()[0] | |
| selected_thread = gdb.selected_thread() | |
| for inferior in gdb.inferiors(): | |
| for thread in inferior.threads(): | |
| if thread == selected_thread: | |
| return inferior | |
| def source_gdb_script(script_contents, to_string=False): | |
| """ | |
| Source a gdb script with script_contents passed as a string. This is useful | |
| to provide defines for py-step and py-next to make them repeatable (this is | |
| not possible with gdb.execute()). See | |
| http://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=12216 | |
| """ | |
| fd, filename = tempfile.mkstemp() | |
| f = os.fdopen(fd, 'w') | |
| f.write(script_contents) | |
| f.close() | |
| gdb.execute("source %s" % filename, to_string=to_string) | |
| os.remove(filename) | |
| def register_defines(): | |
| source_gdb_script(textwrap.dedent("""\ | |
| define py-step | |
| -py-step | |
| end | |
| define py-next | |
| -py-next | |
| end | |
| document py-step | |
| %s | |
| end | |
| document py-next | |
| %s | |
| end | |
| """) % (PyStep.__doc__, PyNext.__doc__)) | |
| def stackdepth(frame): | |
| "Tells the stackdepth of a gdb frame." | |
| depth = 0 | |
| while frame: | |
| frame = frame.older() | |
| depth += 1 | |
| return depth | |
| class ExecutionControlCommandBase(gdb.Command): | |
| """ | |
| Superclass for language specific execution control. Language specific | |
| features should be implemented by lang_info using the LanguageInfo | |
| interface. 'name' is the name of the command. | |
| """ | |
| def __init__(self, name, lang_info): | |
| super(ExecutionControlCommandBase, self).__init__( | |
| name, gdb.COMMAND_RUNNING, gdb.COMPLETE_NONE) | |
| self.lang_info = lang_info | |
| def install_breakpoints(self): | |
| all_locations = itertools.chain( | |
| self.lang_info.static_break_functions(), | |
| self.lang_info.runtime_break_functions()) | |
| for location in all_locations: | |
| result = gdb.execute('break %s' % location, to_string=True) | |
| yield re.search(r'Breakpoint (\d+)', result).group(1) | |
| def delete_breakpoints(self, breakpoint_list): | |
| for bp in breakpoint_list: | |
| gdb.execute("delete %s" % bp) | |
| def filter_output(self, result): | |
| reflags = re.MULTILINE | |
| output_on_halt = [ | |
| (r'^Program received signal .*', reflags|re.DOTALL), | |
| (r'.*[Ww]arning.*', 0), | |
| (r'^Program exited .*', reflags), | |
| ] | |
| output_always = [ | |
| # output when halting on a watchpoint | |
| (r'^(Old|New) value = .*', reflags), | |
| # output from the 'display' command | |
| (r'^\d+: \w+ = .*', reflags), | |
| ] | |
| def filter_output(regexes): | |
| output = [] | |
| for regex, flags in regexes: | |
| for match in re.finditer(regex, result, flags): | |
| output.append(match.group(0)) | |
| return '\n'.join(output) | |
| # Filter the return value output of the 'finish' command | |
| match_finish = re.search(r'^Value returned is \$\d+ = (.*)', result, | |
| re.MULTILINE) | |
| if match_finish: | |
| finish_output = 'Value returned: %s\n' % match_finish.group(1) | |
| else: | |
| finish_output = '' | |
| return (filter_output(output_on_halt), | |
| finish_output + filter_output(output_always)) | |
| def stopped(self): | |
| return get_selected_inferior().pid == 0 | |
| def finish_executing(self, result): | |
| """ | |
| After doing some kind of code running in the inferior, print the line | |
| of source code or the result of the last executed gdb command (passed | |
| in as the `result` argument). | |
| """ | |
| output_on_halt, output_always = self.filter_output(result) | |
| if self.stopped(): | |
| print(output_always) | |
| print(output_on_halt) | |
| else: | |
| frame = gdb.selected_frame() | |
| source_line = self.lang_info.get_source_line(frame) | |
| if self.lang_info.is_relevant_function(frame): | |
| raised_exception = self.lang_info.exc_info(frame) | |
| if raised_exception: | |
| print(raised_exception) | |
| if source_line: | |
| if output_always.rstrip(): | |
| print(output_always.rstrip()) | |
| print(source_line) | |
| else: | |
| print(result) | |
| def _finish(self): | |
| """ | |
| Execute until the function returns (or until something else makes it | |
| stop) | |
| """ | |
| if gdb.selected_frame().older() is not None: | |
| return gdb.execute('finish', to_string=True) | |
| else: | |
| # outermost frame, continue | |
| return gdb.execute('cont', to_string=True) | |
| def _finish_frame(self): | |
| """ | |
| Execute until the function returns to a relevant caller. | |
| """ | |
| while True: | |
| result = self._finish() | |
| try: | |
| frame = gdb.selected_frame() | |
| except RuntimeError: | |
| break | |
| hitbp = re.search(r'Breakpoint (\d+)', result) | |
| is_relevant = self.lang_info.is_relevant_function(frame) | |
| if hitbp or is_relevant or self.stopped(): | |
| break | |
| return result | |
| def finish(self, *args): | |
| "Implements the finish command." | |
| result = self._finish_frame() | |
| self.finish_executing(result) | |
| def step(self, stepinto, stepover_command='next'): | |
| """ | |
| Do a single step or step-over. Returns the result of the last gdb | |
| command that made execution stop. | |
| This implementation, for stepping, sets (conditional) breakpoints for | |
| all functions that are deemed relevant. It then does a step over until | |
| either something halts execution, or until the next line is reached. | |
| If, however, stepover_command is given, it should be a string gdb | |
| command that continues execution in some way. The idea is that the | |
| caller has set a (conditional) breakpoint or watchpoint that can work | |
| more efficiently than the step-over loop. For Python this means setting | |
| a watchpoint for f->f_lasti, which means we can then subsequently | |
| "finish" frames. | |
| We want f->f_lasti instead of f->f_lineno, because the latter only | |
| works properly with local trace functions, see | |
| PyFrameObjectPtr.current_line_num and PyFrameObjectPtr.addr2line. | |
| """ | |
| if stepinto: | |
| breakpoint_list = list(self.install_breakpoints()) | |
| beginframe = gdb.selected_frame() | |
| if self.lang_info.is_relevant_function(beginframe): | |
| # If we start in a relevant frame, initialize stuff properly. If | |
| # we don't start in a relevant frame, the loop will halt | |
| # immediately. So don't call self.lang_info.lineno() as it may | |
| # raise for irrelevant frames. | |
| beginline = self.lang_info.lineno(beginframe) | |
| if not stepinto: | |
| depth = stackdepth(beginframe) | |
| newframe = beginframe | |
| while True: | |
| if self.lang_info.is_relevant_function(newframe): | |
| result = gdb.execute(stepover_command, to_string=True) | |
| else: | |
| result = self._finish_frame() | |
| if self.stopped(): | |
| break | |
| newframe = gdb.selected_frame() | |
| is_relevant_function = self.lang_info.is_relevant_function(newframe) | |
| try: | |
| framename = newframe.name() | |
| except RuntimeError: | |
| framename = None | |
| m = re.search(r'Breakpoint (\d+)', result) | |
| if m: | |
| if is_relevant_function and m.group(1) in breakpoint_list: | |
| # although we hit a breakpoint, we still need to check | |
| # that the function, in case hit by a runtime breakpoint, | |
| # is in the right context | |
| break | |
| if newframe != beginframe: | |
| # new function | |
| if not stepinto: | |
| # see if we returned to the caller | |
| newdepth = stackdepth(newframe) | |
| is_relevant_function = (newdepth < depth and | |
| is_relevant_function) | |
| if is_relevant_function: | |
| break | |
| else: | |
| # newframe equals beginframe, check for a difference in the | |
| # line number | |
| lineno = self.lang_info.lineno(newframe) | |
| if lineno and lineno != beginline: | |
| break | |
| if stepinto: | |
| self.delete_breakpoints(breakpoint_list) | |
| self.finish_executing(result) | |
| def run(self, args, from_tty): | |
| self.finish_executing(gdb.execute('run ' + args, to_string=True)) | |
| def cont(self, *args): | |
| self.finish_executing(gdb.execute('cont', to_string=True)) | |
| class LanguageInfo(object): | |
| """ | |
| This class defines the interface that ExecutionControlCommandBase needs to | |
| provide language-specific execution control. | |
| Classes that implement this interface should implement: | |
| lineno(frame) | |
| Tells the current line number (only called for a relevant frame). | |
| If lineno is a false value it is not checked for a difference. | |
| is_relevant_function(frame) | |
| tells whether we care about frame 'frame' | |
| get_source_line(frame) | |
| get the line of source code for the current line (only called for a | |
| relevant frame). If the source code cannot be retrieved this | |
| function should return None | |
| exc_info(frame) -- optional | |
| tells whether an exception was raised, if so, it should return a | |
| string representation of the exception value, None otherwise. | |
| static_break_functions() | |
| returns an iterable of function names that are considered relevant | |
| and should halt step-into execution. This is needed to provide a | |
| performing step-into | |
| runtime_break_functions() -- optional | |
| list of functions that we should break into depending on the | |
| context | |
| """ | |
| def exc_info(self, frame): | |
| "See this class' docstring." | |
| def runtime_break_functions(self): | |
| """ | |
| Implement this if the list of step-into functions depends on the | |
| context. | |
| """ | |
| return () | |
| class PythonInfo(LanguageInfo): | |
| def pyframe(self, frame): | |
| pyframe = Frame(frame).get_pyop() | |
| if pyframe: | |
| return pyframe | |
| else: | |
| raise gdb.RuntimeError( | |
| "Unable to find the Python frame, run your code with a debug " | |
| "build (configure with --with-pydebug or compile with -g).") | |
| def lineno(self, frame): | |
| return self.pyframe(frame).current_line_num() | |
| def is_relevant_function(self, frame): | |
| return Frame(frame).is_evalframeex() | |
| def get_source_line(self, frame): | |
| try: | |
| pyframe = self.pyframe(frame) | |
| return '%4d %s' % (pyframe.current_line_num(), | |
| pyframe.current_line().rstrip()) | |
| except IOError: | |
| return None | |
| def exc_info(self, frame): | |
| try: | |
| tstate = frame.read_var('tstate').dereference() | |
| if gdb.parse_and_eval('tstate->frame == f'): | |
| # tstate local variable initialized, check for an exception | |
| inf_type = tstate['curexc_type'] | |
| inf_value = tstate['curexc_value'] | |
| if inf_type: | |
| return 'An exception was raised: %s' % (inf_value,) | |
| except (ValueError, RuntimeError): | |
| # Could not read the variable tstate or it's memory, it's ok | |
| pass | |
| def static_break_functions(self): | |
| yield 'PyEval_EvalFrameEx' | |
| class PythonStepperMixin(object): | |
| """ | |
| Make this a mixin so CyStep can also inherit from this and use a | |
| CythonCodeStepper at the same time. | |
| """ | |
| def python_step(self, stepinto): | |
| """ | |
| Set a watchpoint on the Python bytecode instruction pointer and try | |
| to finish the frame | |
| """ | |
| output = gdb.execute('watch f->f_lasti', to_string=True) | |
| watchpoint = int(re.search(r'[Ww]atchpoint (\d+):', output).group(1)) | |
| self.step(stepinto=stepinto, stepover_command='finish') | |
| gdb.execute('delete %s' % watchpoint) | |
| class PyStep(ExecutionControlCommandBase, PythonStepperMixin): | |
| "Step through Python code." | |
| stepinto = True | |
| def invoke(self, args, from_tty): | |
| self.python_step(stepinto=self.stepinto) | |
| class PyNext(PyStep): | |
| "Step-over Python code." | |
| stepinto = False | |
| class PyFinish(ExecutionControlCommandBase): | |
| "Execute until function returns to a caller." | |
| invoke = ExecutionControlCommandBase.finish | |
| class PyRun(ExecutionControlCommandBase): | |
| "Run the program." | |
| invoke = ExecutionControlCommandBase.run | |
| class PyCont(ExecutionControlCommandBase): | |
| invoke = ExecutionControlCommandBase.cont | |
| def _pointervalue(gdbval): | |
| """ | |
| Return the value of the pointer as a Python int. | |
| gdbval.type must be a pointer type | |
| """ | |
| # don't convert with int() as it will raise a RuntimeError | |
| if gdbval.address is not None: | |
| return int(gdbval.address) | |
| else: | |
| # the address attribute is None sometimes, in which case we can | |
| # still convert the pointer to an int | |
| return int(gdbval) | |
| def pointervalue(gdbval): | |
| pointer = _pointervalue(gdbval) | |
| try: | |
| if pointer < 0: | |
| raise gdb.GdbError("Negative pointer value, presumably a bug " | |
| "in gdb, aborting.") | |
| except RuntimeError: | |
| # work around yet another bug in gdb where you get random behaviour | |
| # and tracebacks | |
| pass | |
| return pointer | |
| def get_inferior_unicode_postfix(): | |
| try: | |
| gdb.parse_and_eval('PyUnicode_FromEncodedObject') | |
| except RuntimeError: | |
| try: | |
| gdb.parse_and_eval('PyUnicodeUCS2_FromEncodedObject') | |
| except RuntimeError: | |
| return 'UCS4' | |
| else: | |
| return 'UCS2' | |
| else: | |
| return '' | |
| class PythonCodeExecutor(object): | |
| Py_single_input = 256 | |
| Py_file_input = 257 | |
| Py_eval_input = 258 | |
| def malloc(self, size): | |
| chunk = (gdb.parse_and_eval("(void *) malloc((size_t) %d)" % size)) | |
| pointer = pointervalue(chunk) | |
| if pointer == 0: | |
| raise gdb.GdbError("No memory could be allocated in the inferior.") | |
| return pointer | |
| def alloc_string(self, string): | |
| pointer = self.malloc(len(string)) | |
| get_selected_inferior().write_memory(pointer, string) | |
| return pointer | |
| def alloc_pystring(self, string): | |
| stringp = self.alloc_string(string) | |
| PyString_FromStringAndSize = 'PyString_FromStringAndSize' | |
| try: | |
| gdb.parse_and_eval(PyString_FromStringAndSize) | |
| except RuntimeError: | |
| # Python 3 | |
| PyString_FromStringAndSize = ('PyUnicode%s_FromStringAndSize' % | |
| (get_inferior_unicode_postfix(),)) | |
| try: | |
| result = gdb.parse_and_eval( | |
| '(PyObject *) %s((char *) %d, (size_t) %d)' % ( | |
| PyString_FromStringAndSize, stringp, len(string))) | |
| finally: | |
| self.free(stringp) | |
| pointer = pointervalue(result) | |
| if pointer == 0: | |
| raise gdb.GdbError("Unable to allocate Python string in " | |
| "the inferior.") | |
| return pointer | |
| def free(self, pointer): | |
| gdb.parse_and_eval("free((void *) %d)" % pointer) | |
| def incref(self, pointer): | |
| "Increment the reference count of a Python object in the inferior." | |
| gdb.parse_and_eval('Py_IncRef((PyObject *) %d)' % pointer) | |
| def xdecref(self, pointer): | |
| "Decrement the reference count of a Python object in the inferior." | |
| # Py_DecRef is like Py_XDECREF, but a function. So we don't have | |
| # to check for NULL. This should also decref all our allocated | |
| # Python strings. | |
| gdb.parse_and_eval('Py_DecRef((PyObject *) %d)' % pointer) | |
| def evalcode(self, code, input_type, global_dict=None, local_dict=None): | |
| """ | |
| Evaluate python code `code` given as a string in the inferior and | |
| return the result as a gdb.Value. Returns a new reference in the | |
| inferior. | |
| Of course, executing any code in the inferior may be dangerous and may | |
| leave the debuggee in an unsafe state or terminate it altogether. | |
| """ | |
| if '\0' in code: | |
| raise gdb.GdbError("String contains NUL byte.") | |
| code += '\0' | |
| pointer = self.alloc_string(code) | |
| globalsp = pointervalue(global_dict) | |
| localsp = pointervalue(local_dict) | |
| if globalsp == 0 or localsp == 0: | |
| raise gdb.GdbError("Unable to obtain or create locals or globals.") | |
| code = """ | |
| PyRun_String( | |
| (char *) %(code)d, | |
| (int) %(start)d, | |
| (PyObject *) %(globals)s, | |
| (PyObject *) %(locals)d) | |
| """ % dict(code=pointer, start=input_type, | |
| globals=globalsp, locals=localsp) | |
| with FetchAndRestoreError(): | |
| try: | |
| pyobject_return_value = gdb.parse_and_eval(code) | |
| finally: | |
| self.free(pointer) | |
| return pyobject_return_value | |
| class FetchAndRestoreError(PythonCodeExecutor): | |
| """ | |
| Context manager that fetches the error indicator in the inferior and | |
| restores it on exit. | |
| """ | |
| def __init__(self): | |
| self.sizeof_PyObjectPtr = gdb.lookup_type('PyObject').pointer().sizeof | |
| self.pointer = self.malloc(self.sizeof_PyObjectPtr * 3) | |
| type = self.pointer | |
| value = self.pointer + self.sizeof_PyObjectPtr | |
| traceback = self.pointer + self.sizeof_PyObjectPtr * 2 | |
| self.errstate = type, value, traceback | |
| def __enter__(self): | |
| gdb.parse_and_eval("PyErr_Fetch(%d, %d, %d)" % self.errstate) | |
| def __exit__(self, *args): | |
| if gdb.parse_and_eval("(int) PyErr_Occurred()"): | |
| gdb.parse_and_eval("PyErr_Print()") | |
| pyerr_restore = ("PyErr_Restore(" | |
| "(PyObject *) *%d," | |
| "(PyObject *) *%d," | |
| "(PyObject *) *%d)") | |
| try: | |
| gdb.parse_and_eval(pyerr_restore % self.errstate) | |
| finally: | |
| self.free(self.pointer) | |
| class FixGdbCommand(gdb.Command): | |
| def __init__(self, command, actual_command): | |
| super(FixGdbCommand, self).__init__(command, gdb.COMMAND_DATA, | |
| gdb.COMPLETE_NONE) | |
| self.actual_command = actual_command | |
| def fix_gdb(self): | |
| """ | |
| It seems that invoking either 'cy exec' and 'py-exec' work perfectly | |
| fine, but after this gdb's python API is entirely broken. | |
| Maybe some uncleared exception value is still set? | |
| sys.exc_clear() didn't help. A demonstration: | |
| (gdb) cy exec 'hello' | |
| 'hello' | |
| (gdb) python gdb.execute('cont') | |
| RuntimeError: Cannot convert value to int. | |
| Error while executing Python code. | |
| (gdb) python gdb.execute('cont') | |
| [15148 refs] | |
| Program exited normally. | |
| """ | |
| warnings.filterwarnings('ignore', r'.*', RuntimeWarning, | |
| re.escape(__name__)) | |
| try: | |
| int(gdb.parse_and_eval("(void *) 0")) == 0 | |
| except RuntimeError: | |
| pass | |
| # warnings.resetwarnings() | |
| def invoke(self, args, from_tty): | |
| self.fix_gdb() | |
| try: | |
| gdb.execute('%s %s' % (self.actual_command, args)) | |
| except RuntimeError as e: | |
| raise gdb.GdbError(str(e)) | |
| self.fix_gdb() | |
| def _evalcode_python(executor, code, input_type): | |
| """ | |
| Execute Python code in the most recent stack frame. | |
| """ | |
| global_dict = gdb.parse_and_eval('PyEval_GetGlobals()') | |
| local_dict = gdb.parse_and_eval('PyEval_GetLocals()') | |
| if (pointervalue(global_dict) == 0 or pointervalue(local_dict) == 0): | |
| raise gdb.GdbError("Unable to find the locals or globals of the " | |
| "most recent Python function (relative to the " | |
| "selected frame).") | |
| return executor.evalcode(code, input_type, global_dict, local_dict) | |
| class PyExec(gdb.Command): | |
| def readcode(self, expr): | |
| if expr: | |
| return expr, PythonCodeExecutor.Py_single_input | |
| else: | |
| lines = [] | |
| while True: | |
| try: | |
| line = input('>') | |
| except EOFError: | |
| break | |
| else: | |
| if line.rstrip() == 'end': | |
| break | |
| lines.append(line) | |
| return '\n'.join(lines), PythonCodeExecutor.Py_file_input | |
| def invoke(self, expr, from_tty): | |
| expr, input_type = self.readcode(expr) | |
| executor = PythonCodeExecutor() | |
| executor.xdecref(_evalcode_python(executor, input_type, global_dict, local_dict)) | |
| gdb.execute('set breakpoint pending on') | |
| if hasattr(gdb, 'GdbError'): | |
| # Wrap py-step and py-next in gdb defines to make them repeatable. | |
| py_step = PyStep('-py-step', PythonInfo()) | |
| py_next = PyNext('-py-next', PythonInfo()) | |
| register_defines() | |
| py_finish = PyFinish('py-finish', PythonInfo()) | |
| py_run = PyRun('py-run', PythonInfo()) | |
| py_cont = PyCont('py-cont', PythonInfo()) | |
| py_exec = FixGdbCommand('py-exec', '-py-exec') | |
| _py_exec = PyExec("-py-exec", gdb.COMMAND_DATA, gdb.COMPLETE_NONE) | |
| else: | |
| warnings.warn("Use gdb 7.2 or higher to use the py-exec command.") | |