clang 20.0.0 (based on r547379) from build 12806354. Bug: http://b/379133546 Test: N/A Change-Id: I2eb8938af55d809de674be63cb30cf27e801862b Upstream-Commit: ad834e67b1105d15ef907f6255d4c96e8e733f57
294 lines
11 KiB
C++
294 lines
11 KiB
C++
//===-- TraceCursor.h -------------------------------------------*- C++ -*-===//
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//
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// Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
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// See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
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// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
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//
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//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
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#ifndef LLDB_TARGET_TRACE_CURSOR_H
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#define LLDB_TARGET_TRACE_CURSOR_H
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#include "lldb/lldb-private.h"
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#include "lldb/Target/ExecutionContext.h"
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#include <optional>
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namespace lldb_private {
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/// Class used for iterating over the instructions of a thread's trace, among
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/// other kinds of information.
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///
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/// This class attempts to be a generic interface for accessing the instructions
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/// of the trace so that each Trace plug-in can reconstruct, represent and store
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/// the instruction data in an flexible way that is efficient for the given
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/// technology.
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///
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/// Live processes:
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/// In the case of a live process trace, an instance of a \a TraceCursor
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/// should point to the trace at the moment it was collected. If the process
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/// is later resumed and new trace data is collected, then it's up to each
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/// trace plug-in to decide whether to leave the old cursor unaffected or not.
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///
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/// Cursor items:
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/// A \a TraceCursor can point at one of the following items:
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///
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/// Errors:
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/// As there could be errors when reconstructing the instructions of a
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/// trace, these errors are represented as failed instructions, and the
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/// cursor can point at them.
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///
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/// Events:
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/// The cursor can also point at events in the trace, which aren't errors
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/// nor instructions. An example of an event could be a context switch in
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/// between two instructions.
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///
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/// Instruction:
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/// An actual instruction with a memory address.
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///
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/// Defaults:
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/// By default, the cursor points at the most recent item in the trace and is
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/// set up to iterate backwards. See the \a TraceCursor::Next() method for
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/// more documentation.
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///
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/// Sample usage:
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///
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/// TraceCursorSP cursor = trace.GetTrace(thread);
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///
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/// for (; cursor->HasValue(); cursor->Next()) {
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/// TraceItemKind kind = cursor->GetItemKind();
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/// switch (cursor->GetItemKind()):
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/// case eTraceItemKindError:
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/// cout << "error found: " << cursor->GetError() << endl;
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/// break;
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/// case eTraceItemKindEvent:
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/// cout << "event found: " << cursor->GetEventTypeAsString() << endl;
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/// break;
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/// case eTraceItemKindInstruction:
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/// std::cout << "instructions found at " << cursor->GetLoadAddress() <<
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/// std::endl; break;
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/// }
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/// }
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///
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/// As the trace might be empty or the cursor might have reached the end of the
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/// trace, you should always invoke \a HasValue() to make sure you don't access
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/// invalid memory.
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///
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/// Random accesses:
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///
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/// The Trace Cursor offer random acesses in the trace via two APIs:
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///
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/// TraceCursor::Seek():
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/// Unlike the \a TraceCursor::Next() API, which moves instruction by
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/// instruction, the \a TraceCursor::Seek() method can be used to
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/// reposition the cursor to an offset of the end, beginning, or current
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/// position of the trace.
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///
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/// TraceCursor::GetId() / TraceCursor::SetId(id):
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/// Each item (error or instruction) in the trace has a numeric identifier
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/// which is defined by the trace plug-in. It's possible to access the id
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/// of the current item using GetId(), and to reposition the cursor to a
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/// given id using SetId(id).
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///
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/// You can read more in the documentation of these methods.
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class TraceCursor {
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public:
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/// Create a cursor that initially points to the end of the trace, i.e. the
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/// most recent item.
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TraceCursor(lldb::ThreadSP thread_sp);
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virtual ~TraceCursor() = default;
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/// Set the direction to use in the \a TraceCursor::Next() method.
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///
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/// \param[in] forwards
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/// If \b true, then the traversal will be forwards, otherwise backwards.
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void SetForwards(bool forwards);
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/// Check if the direction to use in the \a TraceCursor::Next() method is
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/// forwards.
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///
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/// \return
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/// \b true if the current direction is forwards, \b false if backwards.
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bool IsForwards() const;
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/// Move the cursor to the next item (instruction or error).
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///
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/// Direction:
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/// The traversal is done following the current direction of the trace. If
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/// it is forwards, the instructions are visited forwards
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/// chronologically. Otherwise, the traversal is done in
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/// the opposite direction. By default, a cursor moves backwards unless
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/// changed with \a TraceCursor::SetForwards().
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virtual void Next() = 0;
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/// \return
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/// \b true if the cursor is pointing to a valid item. \b false if the
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/// cursor has reached the end of the trace.
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virtual bool HasValue() const = 0;
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/// Instruction identifiers:
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///
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/// When building complex higher level tools, fast random accesses in the
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/// trace might be needed, for which each instruction requires a unique
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/// identifier within its thread trace. For example, a tool might want to
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/// repeatedly inspect random consecutive portions of a trace. This means that
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/// it will need to first move quickly to the beginning of each section and
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/// then start its iteration. Given that the number of instructions can be in
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/// the order of hundreds of millions, fast random access is necessary.
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///
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/// An example of such a tool could be an inspector of the call graph of a
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/// trace, where each call is represented with its start and end instructions.
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/// Inspecting all the instructions of a call requires moving to its first
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/// instruction and then iterating until the last instruction, which following
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/// the pattern explained above.
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///
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/// Instead of using 0-based indices as identifiers, each Trace plug-in can
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/// decide the nature of these identifiers and thus no assumptions can be made
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/// regarding their ordering and sequentiality. The reason is that an
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/// instruction might be encoded by the plug-in in a way that hides its actual
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/// 0-based index in the trace, but it's still possible to efficiently find
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/// it.
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///
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/// Requirements:
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/// - For a given thread, no two instructions have the same id.
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/// - In terms of efficiency, moving the cursor to a given id should be as
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/// fast as possible, but not necessarily O(1). That's why the recommended
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/// way to traverse sequential instructions is to use the \a
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/// TraceCursor::Next() method and only use \a TraceCursor::GoToId(id)
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/// sparingly.
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/// Make the cursor point to the item whose identifier is \p id.
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///
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/// \return
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/// \b true if the given identifier exists and the cursor effectively
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/// moved to it. Otherwise, \b false is returned and the cursor now points
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/// to an invalid item, i.e. calling \a HasValue() will return \b false.
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virtual bool GoToId(lldb::user_id_t id) = 0;
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/// \return
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/// \b true if and only if there's an instruction item with the given \p
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/// id.
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virtual bool HasId(lldb::user_id_t id) const = 0;
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/// \return
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/// A unique identifier for the instruction or error this cursor is
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/// pointing to.
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virtual lldb::user_id_t GetId() const = 0;
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/// \}
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/// Make the cursor point to an item in the trace based on an origin point and
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/// an offset.
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///
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/// The resulting position of the trace is
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/// origin + offset
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///
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/// If this resulting position would be out of bounds, the trace then points
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/// to an invalid item, i.e. calling \a HasValue() returns \b false.
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///
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/// \param[in] offset
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/// How many items to move forwards (if positive) or backwards (if
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/// negative) from the given origin point. For example, if origin is \b
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/// End, then a negative offset would move backward in the trace, but a
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/// positive offset would move past the trace to an invalid item.
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///
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/// \param[in] origin
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/// The reference point to use when moving the cursor.
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///
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/// \return
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/// \b true if and only if the cursor ends up pointing to a valid item.
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virtual bool Seek(int64_t offset, lldb::TraceCursorSeekType origin) = 0;
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/// \return
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/// The \a ExecutionContextRef of the backing thread from the creation time
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/// of this cursor.
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ExecutionContextRef &GetExecutionContextRef();
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/// Trace item information (instructions, errors and events)
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/// \{
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/// \return
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/// The kind of item the cursor is pointing at.
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virtual lldb::TraceItemKind GetItemKind() const = 0;
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/// \return
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/// Whether the cursor points to an error or not.
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bool IsError() const;
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/// \return
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/// The error message the cursor is pointing at.
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virtual llvm::StringRef GetError() const = 0;
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/// \return
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/// Whether the cursor points to an event or not.
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bool IsEvent() const;
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/// \return
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/// The specific kind of event the cursor is pointing at.
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virtual lldb::TraceEvent GetEventType() const = 0;
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/// \return
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/// A human-readable description of the event this cursor is pointing at.
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const char *GetEventTypeAsString() const;
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/// \return
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/// A human-readable description of the given event.
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static const char *EventKindToString(lldb::TraceEvent event_kind);
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/// \return
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/// Whether the cursor points to an instruction.
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bool IsInstruction() const;
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/// \return
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/// The load address of the instruction the cursor is pointing at.
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virtual lldb::addr_t GetLoadAddress() const = 0;
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/// Get the CPU associated with the current trace item.
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///
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/// This call might not be O(1), so it's suggested to invoke this method
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/// whenever an eTraceEventCPUChanged event is fired.
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///
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/// \return
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/// The requested CPU id, or LLDB_INVALID_CPU_ID if this information is
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/// not available for the current item.
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virtual lldb::cpu_id_t GetCPU() const = 0;
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/// Get the last hardware clock value that was emitted before the current
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/// trace item.
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///
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/// This call might not be O(1), so it's suggested to invoke this method
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/// whenever an eTraceEventHWClockTick event is fired.
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///
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/// \return
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/// The requested HW clock value, or \a std::nullopt if this information
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/// is not available for the current item.
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virtual std::optional<uint64_t> GetHWClock() const = 0;
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/// Get the approximate wall clock time in nanoseconds at which the current
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/// trace item was executed. Each trace plug-in has a different definition for
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/// what time 0 means.
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///
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/// \return
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/// The approximate wall clock time for the trace item, or \a std::nullopt
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/// if not available.
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virtual std::optional<double> GetWallClockTime() const = 0;
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/// Get some metadata associated with a synchronization point event. As
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/// different trace technologies might have different values for this,
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/// we return a string for flexibility.
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///
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/// \return
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/// A string representing some metadata associated with a
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/// \a eTraceEventSyncPoint event. \b std::nullopt if no metadata is
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/// available.
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virtual std::optional<std::string> GetSyncPointMetadata() const = 0;
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/// \}
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protected:
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ExecutionContextRef m_exe_ctx_ref;
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bool m_forwards = false;
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};
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} // namespace lldb_private
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#endif // LLDB_TARGET_TRACE_CURSOR_H
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