As mentioned already on this list, some embedded devices permit reading
of certain memory regions whilst the processor is running.

For such situations it would be nice to engineer lldb to permit that
functionality.

Matt

On Thu, 2014-09-25 at 14:59 -0700, Greg Clayton wrote:
> When the process resumes it takes a "run lock" to stop anything else that 
> requires a process to stay stopped (like memory read, register read, or 
> anything involving looking at the process). Only one thing can have the run 
> lock at a time. When the process stops, one or more threads can take the 
> "stop lock". It is like a read/write locker where the read lock can be taken 
> by N threads and they will keep anyone from acquiring the write lock, and 
> only one can take the write lock (process needs to run) after all readers 
> have let go of the read lock (stay stopped). So somehow this isn't working on 
> the system you are debugging on. That needs to be fixed.
> 
> Greg
> 
> > On Sep 25, 2014, at 2:42 PM, Mikhail Sosonkin <m...@nanotick.net> wrote:
> > 
> > I only have one thread in operation, so I don't expect there do be any
> > race conditions unless LLDB has its own threads under the hood. So far
> > as I can tell, this lock fails for some reason:
> > 
> >        Process::StopLocker stop_locker;
> >        if (stop_locker.TryLock(&process_sp->GetRunLock()))
> >        {
> >            Mutex::Locker api_locker (process_sp->GetTarget().GetAPIMutex());
> >            bytes_read = process_sp->ReadMemory (addr, dst, dst_len,
> > sb_error.ref());
> >        }
> >        else
> >        {
> >            if (log)
> >                log->Printf ("SBProcess(%p)::ReadMemory() => error:
> > process is running",
> >                             static_cast<void*>(process_sp.get()));
> >            sb_error.SetErrorString("process is running");
> >        }
> > 
> > At the moment, I don't know why but would be happy to hear your thoughts.
> > 
> > Thanks,
> > Mike.
> > 
> > On Thu, Sep 25, 2014 at 1:47 PM, Greg Clayton <gclay...@apple.com> wrote:
> >> It should be easy for you to step through the SBProcess::ReadMemory() call 
> >> and see what is going wrong. If the process is stopped, it should 
> >> definitely be returning memory. You are sure you don't have thread race 
> >> conditions where some other thread is resuming the process?
> >> 
> >> 
> >>> On Sep 25, 2014, at 10:34 AM, Mikhail Sosonkin <m...@nanotick.net> wrote:
> >>> 
> >>> Hello,
> >>> 
> >>> I'm trying to read some memory from a stopped process. However, the
> >>> read function errors out with "process is running" message even though
> >>> SBProcess::GetState tells me that the process is stopped. The process
> >>> was stopped because it hit a breakpoint.
> >>> 
> >>> SBProcess(0x7fed13981600)::GetState () => stopped
> >>> SBProcess(0x7fed13981600)::GetState () => stopped
> >>> SBProcess(0x7fed13981600)::ReadMemory (addr=0x7fff5fc34000,
> >>> dst=0x112eff900, dst_len=4096, SBError (0x0))...
> >>> SBProcess(0x7fed13981600)::ReadMemory() => error: process is running
> >>> SBProcess(0x7fed13981600)::ReadMemory (addr=0x7fff5fc34000,
> >>> dst=0x112eff900, dst_len=4096, SBError (0x7fed12621ee0): error:
> >>> process is running) => 0
> >>> 
> >>> I have two questions:
> >>> - Is this a bug/known issue? I'm using lldb library that comes with
> >>> Xcode 5 version lldb-310.2.37 (though I read somewhere that these
> >>> version numbers don't help you much).
> >>> 
> >>> - Is there a mechanism to read memory of a running process?
> >>> 
> >>> Thanks,
> >>> Mike.
> >>> _______________________________________________
> >>> lldb-dev mailing list
> >>> lldb-dev@cs.uiuc.edu
> >>> http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/lldb-dev
> >> 
> > 
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