Fixed a bug where persistent variables did not
live as long as they needed to. This led to
equality tests involving persistent variables
often failing or succeeding when they had no
business doing so.
To do this, I introduced the ability for a
memory allocation to "leak" - that is, to
persist in the process beyond the lifetime of
the expression. Hand-declared persistent
variables do this now.
<rdar://problem/13956311>
llvm-svn: 182528
diff --git a/lldb/source/Expression/IRMemoryMap.cpp b/lldb/source/Expression/IRMemoryMap.cpp
index 4c4cef4..9a0f034 100644
--- a/lldb/source/Expression/IRMemoryMap.cpp
+++ b/lldb/source/Expression/IRMemoryMap.cpp
@@ -38,7 +38,10 @@
while ((iter = m_allocations.begin()) != m_allocations.end())
{
err.Clear();
- Free(iter->first, err);
+ if (iter->second.m_leak)
+ m_allocations.erase(iter);
+ else
+ Free(iter->first, err);
}
}
}
@@ -369,6 +372,25 @@
}
void
+IRMemoryMap::Leak (lldb::addr_t process_address, Error &error)
+{
+ error.Clear();
+
+ AllocationMap::iterator iter = m_allocations.find(process_address);
+
+ if (iter == m_allocations.end())
+ {
+ error.SetErrorToGenericError();
+ error.SetErrorString("Couldn't leak: allocation doesn't exist");
+ return;
+ }
+
+ Allocation &allocation = iter->second;
+
+ allocation.m_leak = true;
+}
+
+void
IRMemoryMap::Free (lldb::addr_t process_address, Error &error)
{
error.Clear();