%feature("docstring",
"Represents the process associated with the target program.
SBProcess supports thread iteration. For example (from test/lldbutil.py), ::
# ==================================================
# Utility functions related to Threads and Processes
# ==================================================
def get_stopped_threads(process, reason):
'''Returns the thread(s) with the specified stop reason in a list.
The list can be empty if no such thread exists.
'''
threads = []
for t in process:
if t.GetStopReason() == reason:
threads.append(t)
return threads
"
) lldb::SBProcess;
%feature("docstring", "
Writes data into the current process's stdin. API client specifies a Python
string as the only argument."
) lldb::SBProcess::PutSTDIN;
%feature("docstring", "
Reads data from the current process's stdout stream. API client specifies
the size of the buffer to read data into. It returns the byte buffer in a
Python string."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetSTDOUT;
%feature("docstring", "
Reads data from the current process's stderr stream. API client specifies
the size of the buffer to read data into. It returns the byte buffer in a
Python string."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetSTDERR;
%feature("docstring", "
Remote connection related functions. These will fail if the
process is not in eStateConnected. They are intended for use
when connecting to an externally managed debugserver instance."
) lldb::SBProcess::RemoteAttachToProcessWithID;
%feature("docstring",
"See SBTarget.Launch for argument description and usage."
) lldb::SBProcess::RemoteLaunch;
%feature("docstring", "
Returns the INDEX'th thread from the list of current threads. The index
of a thread is only valid for the current stop. For a persistent thread
identifier use either the thread ID or the IndexID. See help on SBThread
for more details."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetThreadAtIndex;
%feature("docstring", "
Returns the thread with the given thread ID."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetThreadByID;
%feature("docstring", "
Returns the thread with the given thread IndexID."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetThreadByIndexID;
%feature("docstring", "
Returns the currently selected thread."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetSelectedThread;
%feature("docstring", "
Lazily create a thread on demand through the current OperatingSystem plug-in, if the current OperatingSystem plug-in supports it."
) lldb::SBProcess::CreateOSPluginThread;
%feature("docstring", "
Returns the process ID of the process."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetProcessID;
%feature("docstring", "
Returns an integer ID that is guaranteed to be unique across all process instances. This is not the process ID, just a unique integer for comparison and caching purposes."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetUniqueID;
%feature("docstring", "
Kills the process and shuts down all threads that were spawned to
track and monitor process."
) lldb::SBProcess::Destroy;
%feature("docstring", "Same as Destroy(self).") lldb::SBProcess::Kill;
%feature("docstring", "Sends the process a unix signal.") lldb::SBProcess::Signal;
%feature("docstring", "
Returns a stop id that will increase every time the process executes. If
include_expression_stops is true, then stops caused by expression evaluation
will cause the returned value to increase, otherwise the counter returned will
only increase when execution is continued explicitly by the user. Note, the value
will always increase, but may increase by more than one per stop."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetStopID;
%feature("docstring", "
Reads memory from the current process's address space and removes any
traps that may have been inserted into the memory. It returns the byte
buffer in a Python string. Example: ::
# Read 4 bytes from address 'addr' and assume error.Success() is True.
content = process.ReadMemory(addr, 4, error)
new_bytes = bytearray(content)"
) lldb::SBProcess::ReadMemory;
%feature("docstring", "
Writes memory to the current process's address space and maintains any
traps that might be present due to software breakpoints. Example: ::
# Create a Python string from the byte array.
new_value = str(bytes)
result = process.WriteMemory(addr, new_value, error)
if not error.Success() or result != len(bytes):
print('SBProcess.WriteMemory() failed!')"
) lldb::SBProcess::WriteMemory;
%feature("docstring", "
Reads a NUL terminated C string from the current process's address space.
It returns a python string of the exact length, or truncates the string if
the maximum character limit is reached. Example: ::
# Read a C string of at most 256 bytes from address '0x1000'
error = lldb.SBError()
cstring = process.ReadCStringFromMemory(0x1000, 256, error)
if error.Success():
print('cstring: ', cstring)
else
print('error: ', error)"
) lldb::SBProcess::ReadCStringFromMemory;
%feature("docstring", "
Reads an unsigned integer from memory given a byte size and an address.
Returns the unsigned integer that was read. Example: ::
# Read a 4 byte unsigned integer from address 0x1000
error = lldb.SBError()
uint = ReadUnsignedFromMemory(0x1000, 4, error)
if error.Success():
print('integer: %u' % uint)
else
print('error: ', error)"
) lldb::SBProcess::ReadUnsignedFromMemory;
%feature("docstring", "
Reads a pointer from memory from an address and returns the value. Example: ::
# Read a pointer from address 0x1000
error = lldb.SBError()
ptr = ReadPointerFromMemory(0x1000, error)
if error.Success():
print('pointer: 0x%x' % ptr)
else
print('error: ', error)"
) lldb::SBProcess::ReadPointerFromMemory;
%feature("docstring", "
Returns the implementation object of the process plugin if available. None
otherwise."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetScriptedImplementation;
%feature("docstring", "
Returns the process' extended crash information."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetExtendedCrashInformation;
%feature("docstring", "
Load the library whose filename is given by image_spec looking in all the
paths supplied in the paths argument. If successful, return a token that
can be passed to UnloadImage and fill loaded_path with the path that was
successfully loaded. On failure, return
lldb.LLDB_INVALID_IMAGE_TOKEN."
) lldb::SBProcess::LoadImageUsingPaths;
%feature("docstring", "
Return the number of different thread-origin extended backtraces
this process can support as a uint32_t.
When the process is stopped and you have an SBThread, lldb may be
able to show a backtrace of when that thread was originally created,
or the work item was enqueued to it (in the case of a libdispatch
queue)."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetNumExtendedBacktraceTypes;
%feature("docstring", "
Takes an index argument, returns the name of one of the thread-origin
extended backtrace methods as a str."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetExtendedBacktraceTypeAtIndex;
%feature("docstring", "
Get information about the process.
Valid process info will only be returned when the process is alive,
use IsValid() to check if the info returned is valid. ::
process_info = process.GetProcessInfo()
if process_info.IsValid():
process_info.GetProcessID()"
) lldb::SBProcess::GetProcessInfo;
%feature("docstring", "
Get the current address mask in this Process of a given type.
There are lldb.eAddressMaskTypeCode and lldb.eAddressMaskTypeData address
masks, and on most Targets, the the Data address mask is more general
because there are no alignment restrictions, as there can be with Code
addresses.
lldb.eAddressMaskTypeAny may be used to get the most general mask.
The bits which are not used for addressing are set to 1 in the returned
mask.
In an unusual environment with different address masks for high and low
memory, this may also be specified. This is uncommon, default is
lldb.eAddressMaskRangeLow."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetAddressMask;
%feature("docstring", "
Set the current address mask in this Process for a given type,
lldb.eAddressMaskTypeCode or lldb.eAddressMaskTypeData. Bits that are not
used for addressing should be set to 1 in the mask.
When setting all masks, lldb.eAddressMaskTypeAll may be specified.
In an unusual environment with different address masks for high and low
memory, this may also be specified. This is uncommon, default is
lldb.eAddressMaskRangeLow."
) lldb::SBProcess::SetAddressMask;
%feature("docstring", "
Set the number of low bits relevant for addressing in this Process
for a given type, lldb.eAddressMaskTypeCode or lldb.eAddressMaskTypeData.
When setting all masks, lldb.eAddressMaskTypeAll may be specified.
In an unusual environment with different address masks for high and low
memory, the address range may also be specified. This is uncommon,
default is lldb.eAddressMaskRangeLow."
) lldb::SBProcess::SetAddressableBits;
%feature("docstring", "
Given a virtual address, clear the bits that are not used for addressing
(and may be used for metadata, memory tagging, point authentication, etc).
By default the most general mask, lldb.eAddressMaskTypeAny is used to
process the address, but lldb.eAddressMaskTypeData and
lldb.eAddressMaskTypeCode may be specified if the type of address is known."
) lldb::SBProcess::FixAddress;
%feature("docstring", "
Allocates a block of memory within the process, with size and
access permissions specified in the arguments. The permissions
argument is an or-combination of zero or more of
lldb.ePermissionsWritable, lldb.ePermissionsReadable, and
lldb.ePermissionsExecutable. Returns the address
of the allocated buffer in the process, or
lldb.LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS if the allocation failed."
) lldb::SBProcess::AllocateMemory;
%feature("docstring", "Get default process broadcaster class name (lldb.process)."
) lldb::SBProcess::GetBroadcasterClass;
%feature("docstring", "
Deallocates the block of memory (previously allocated using
AllocateMemory) given in the argument."
) lldb::SBProcess::DeallocateMemory;