llvm-capstone/lldb/bindings/interface/SBFrameDocstrings.i
Alex Langford 662548c826 [lldb] Replace SB swig interfaces with API headers
Instead of maintaining separate swig interface files, we can use the API
headers directly. They implement the exact same C++ APIs and we can
conditionally include the python extensions as needed. To remove the
swig extensions from the API headers when building the LLDB
framework, we can use the unifdef tool when it is available. Otherwise
we just copy them as-is.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D142926
2023-02-16 11:18:04 -08:00

154 lines
5.4 KiB
OpenEdge ABL

%feature("docstring",
"Represents one of the stack frames associated with a thread.
SBThread contains SBFrame(s). For example (from test/lldbutil.py), ::
def print_stacktrace(thread, string_buffer = False):
'''Prints a simple stack trace of this thread.'''
...
for i in range(depth):
frame = thread.GetFrameAtIndex(i)
function = frame.GetFunction()
load_addr = addrs[i].GetLoadAddress(target)
if not function:
file_addr = addrs[i].GetFileAddress()
start_addr = frame.GetSymbol().GetStartAddress().GetFileAddress()
symbol_offset = file_addr - start_addr
print >> output, ' frame #{num}: {addr:#016x} {mod}`{symbol} + {offset}'.format(
num=i, addr=load_addr, mod=mods[i], symbol=symbols[i], offset=symbol_offset)
else:
print >> output, ' frame #{num}: {addr:#016x} {mod}`{func} at {file}:{line} {args}'.format(
num=i, addr=load_addr, mod=mods[i],
func='%s [inlined]' % funcs[i] if frame.IsInlined() else funcs[i],
file=files[i], line=lines[i],
args=get_args_as_string(frame, showFuncName=False) if not frame.IsInlined() else '()')
...
And, ::
for frame in thread:
print frame
See also SBThread."
) lldb::SBFrame;
%feature("docstring", "
Get the Canonical Frame Address for this stack frame.
This is the DWARF standard's definition of a CFA, a stack address
that remains constant throughout the lifetime of the function.
Returns an lldb::addr_t stack address, or LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS if
the CFA cannot be determined."
) lldb::SBFrame::GetCFA;
%feature("docstring", "
Gets the deepest block that contains the frame PC.
See also GetFrameBlock()."
) lldb::SBFrame::GetBlock;
%feature("docstring", "
Get the appropriate function name for this frame. Inlined functions in
LLDB are represented by Blocks that have inlined function information, so
just looking at the SBFunction or SBSymbol for a frame isn't enough.
This function will return the appropriate function, symbol or inlined
function name for the frame.
This function returns:
- the name of the inlined function (if there is one)
- the name of the concrete function (if there is one)
- the name of the symbol (if there is one)
- NULL
See also IsInlined()."
) lldb::SBFrame::GetFunctionName;
%feature("docstring", "
Returns the language of the frame's SBFunction, or if there.
is no SBFunction, guess the language from the mangled name.
."
) lldb::SBFrame::GuessLanguage;
%feature("docstring", "
Return true if this frame represents an inlined function.
See also GetFunctionName()."
) lldb::SBFrame::IsInlined;
%feature("docstring", "
Return true if this frame is artificial (e.g a frame synthesized to
capture a tail call). Local variables may not be available in an artificial
frame."
) lldb::SBFrame::IsArtificial;
%feature("docstring", "
The version that doesn't supply a 'use_dynamic' value will use the
target's default."
) lldb::SBFrame::EvaluateExpression;
%feature("docstring", "
Gets the lexical block that defines the stack frame. Another way to think
of this is it will return the block that contains all of the variables
for a stack frame. Inlined functions are represented as SBBlock objects
that have inlined function information: the name of the inlined function,
where it was called from. The block that is returned will be the first
block at or above the block for the PC (SBFrame::GetBlock()) that defines
the scope of the frame. When a function contains no inlined functions,
this will be the top most lexical block that defines the function.
When a function has inlined functions and the PC is currently
in one of those inlined functions, this method will return the inlined
block that defines this frame. If the PC isn't currently in an inlined
function, the lexical block that defines the function is returned."
) lldb::SBFrame::GetFrameBlock;
%feature("docstring", "
The version that doesn't supply a 'use_dynamic' value will use the
target's default."
) lldb::SBFrame::GetVariables;
%feature("docstring", "
The version that doesn't supply a 'use_dynamic' value will use the
target's default."
) lldb::SBFrame::FindVariable;
%feature("docstring", "
Get a lldb.SBValue for a variable path.
Variable paths can include access to pointer or instance members: ::
rect_ptr->origin.y
pt.x
Pointer dereferences: ::
*this->foo_ptr
**argv
Address of: ::
&pt
&my_array[3].x
Array accesses and treating pointers as arrays: ::
int_array[1]
pt_ptr[22].x
Unlike `EvaluateExpression()` which returns :py:class:`SBValue` objects
with constant copies of the values at the time of evaluation,
the result of this function is a value that will continue to
track the current value of the value as execution progresses
in the current frame."
) lldb::SBFrame::GetValueForVariablePath;
%feature("docstring", "
Find variables, register sets, registers, or persistent variables using
the frame as the scope.
The version that doesn't supply a ``use_dynamic`` value will use the
target's default."
) lldb::SBFrame::FindValue;