Feature #18910
closedImprove maintainability of LLDB helpers
Description
Summary¶
lldb_cruby.py manages lldb custom commands using functions. The file is a large list of Python functions, and an init handler to map some of the Python functions into the debugger, to enable execution of custom logic during a debugging session.
Since LLDB 3.7 (September 2015) there has also been support for using python classes rather than bare functions, as long as those classes implement a specific interface.
This PR Introduces some more defined structure to the LLDB helper functions by switching from the function based implementation to the class based one, and providing an auto-loading mechanism by which new functions can be loaded.
The intention behind this change is to make working with the LLDB helpers easier, by reducing code duplication, providing a consistent structure and a clearer API for developers.
Background¶
The current function based approach has some advantages and disadvantages
Advantages:
- Adding new code is easy.
 - All the code is self contained and searchable.
 
Disadvantages:
- No visible organisation of the file contents. This means
- Hard to tell which functions are utility functions and which are available to you in a debugging session
 - Lots of code duplication within lldb functions
 
 - Large files quickly become intimidating to work with - for example, 
lldb_disasm.pywas implemented as a seperate Python module because it was easier to start with a clean slate than add significant amounts of code tolldb_cruby.py 
What are we doing here?¶
This PR attempts, to fix the disadvantages of the current approach and maintain, or enhance, the benefits. The new structure of a command looks like this;
# Our class inherits from RbBaseCommand which provides access to Ruby globals
# and utility helpers
class TestCommand(RbBaseCommand):
   # program is the keyword the user will type in lldb to execute this command
   program = "test"
   # help_string will be displayed in lldb when the user uses the help functions
   help_string = "This is a test command to show how to implement lldb commands"
   # Init is required by the API but we don't need to do anything here
   def __init__(self, debugger, _internal_dict):
       pass
   # call is where our command logic will be implemented
   def __call__(self, debugger, command, exe_ctx, result):
       # this call to super sets up the Ruby globals, ie. everything that currently
       # done by the following code in the current lldb helpers
       #   if not ('RUBY_Qfalse' in globals()):
       #       lldb_init(debugger)
       #
       super().__call__(self, debugger, command, exe_ctx, result)
       # Set up some commonly used variables. Nearly every existing lldb command
       # currently does this by hand.
       target, process, thread, frame = self.build_environment(debugger)
       # rest of our code goes here
If the command fulfils the following criteria it will then be auto-loaded when an lldb session is started:
- The package file must exist inside the 
commandsdirectory and the filename must end in_command.py - The package must implement a class whose name ends in 
Command - The class must implement the 
lldbAPI (at minimum this means defining__init__and__call__, but also optionallyget_short_helpandget_long_help) - The class must have a class variable 
packagethat is a String. This is the name of the command you'll call in thelldbdebugger. 
Advantages/Disadvantages of this approach¶
Advantages:
- Less code duplication.
- We can now use inheritance and mix-ins to provide shared functionality between commands.
 - Commands are easier to read and reason about, only code relevant to the command behaviour is in 
__call__most everything else can be abstracted away. 
 - Easier to see at a glance what functions are available, what they do, and what commands they're mapped to, rather than jumping around a large file
 
Disadvantages
- Slightly more boilerplate code required to add new commands - although I've attempted to mitigate this by providing a template - 
commands/command_template.pythat can be copied and renamed to use as a starting point. 
Notes¶
- Only two smaller commands have been ported to this new structure at the moment: 
heap_page, andrclass_ext. I've kept these commits seperate in order to show what work is required to port existing commands over to the new style. - More commands will be ported over individually in seperate PR's, until eventually we'll have no more function based commands at all and can deprecate them.
 - The debugger instance passed to 
__call__is different to the one passed to__init__- and attempting to store one in an ivar and use it later doesn't work for me. This means I can't call super in the initialiser to setup the thread variables, and have them exist and work by the time the function is called. I'd like to find a way around this issue and callsuperin the__init__to clean up the__call__a little more.