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[lldb][Docs] Add page about debugging lldb itself (llvm#65332)
We have docs about how to use lldb on other programs, this tells you how to use lldb on ldlb and lldb-server. Lacking any Mac experience I've not included any debugserver information apart from stating it will be similar but not the same. I plan for this page to include sections on debugging tests and other things but this initial commit is purely about the two main binaries involved.
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lldb/docs/index.rst

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@@ -148,6 +148,7 @@ interesting areas to contribute to lldb.
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resources/contributing
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resources/build
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resources/test
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resources/debugging
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resources/fuzzing
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resources/sbapi
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resources/extensions

lldb/docs/resources/debugging.rst

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Debugging
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=========
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This page details various ways to debug LLDB itself and other LLDB tools. If
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you want to know how to use LLDB in general, please refer to
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:doc:`/use/tutorial`.
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As LLDB is generally split into 2 tools, ``lldb`` and ``lldb-server``
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(``debugserver`` on Mac OS), the techniques shown here will not always apply to
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both. With some knowledge of them all, you can mix and match as needed.
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In this document we refer to the initial ``lldb`` as the "debugger" and the
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program being debugged as the "inferior".
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Building For Debugging
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----------------------
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To build LLDB with debugging information add the following to your CMake
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configuration:
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::
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-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug \
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-DLLDB_EXPORT_ALL_SYMBOLS=ON
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Note that the ``lldb`` you will use to do the debugging does not itself need to
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have debug information.
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Then build as you normally would according to :doc:`/resources/build`.
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If you are going to debug in a way that doesn't need debug info (printf, strace,
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etc.) we recommend adding ``LLVM_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS=ON`` to Release build
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configurations. This will make LLDB fail earlier instead of continuing with
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invalid state (assertions are enabled by default for Debug builds).
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Debugging ``lldb``
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------------------
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The simplest scenario is where we want to debug a local execution of ``lldb``
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like this one:
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::
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./bin/lldb test_program
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LLDB is like any other program, so you can use the same approach.
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::
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./bin/lldb -- ./bin/lldb /tmp/test.o
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That's it. At least, that's the minimum. There's nothing special about LLDB
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being a debugger that means you can't attach another debugger to it like any
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other program.
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What can be an issue is that both debuggers have command line interfaces which
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makes it very confusing which one is which:
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::
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(the debugger)
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(lldb) run
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Process 1741640 launched: '<...>/bin/lldb' (aarch64)
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Process 1741640 stopped and restarted: thread 1 received signal: SIGCHLD
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(the inferior)
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(lldb) target create "/tmp/test.o"
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Current executable set to '/tmp/test.o' (aarch64).
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Another issue is that when you resume the inferior, it will not print the
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``(lldb)`` prompt because as far as it knows it hasn't changed state. A quick
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way around that is to type something that is clearly not a command and hit
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enter.
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::
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(lldb) Process 1742266 stopped and restarted: thread 1 received signal: SIGCHLD
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Process 1742266 stopped
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* thread #1, name = 'lldb', stop reason = signal SIGSTOP
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frame #0: 0x0000ffffed5bfbf0 libc.so.6`__GI___libc_read at read.c:26:10
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(lldb) c
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Process 1742266 resuming
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notacommand
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error: 'notacommand' is not a valid command.
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(lldb)
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You could just remember whether you are in the debugger or the inferior but
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it's more for you to remember, and for interrupt based events you simply may not
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be able to know.
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Here are some better approaches. First, you could use another debugger like GDB
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to debug LLDB. Perhaps an IDE like Xcode or Visual Studio Code. Something which
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runs LLDB under the hood so you don't have to type in commands to the debugger
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yourself.
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Or you could change the prompt text for the debugger and/or inferior.
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::
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$ ./bin/lldb -o "settings set prompt \"(lldb debugger) \"" -- \
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./bin/lldb -o "settings set prompt \"(lldb inferior) \"" /tmp/test.o
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<...>
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(lldb) settings set prompt "(lldb debugger) "
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(lldb debugger) run
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<...>
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(lldb) settings set prompt "(lldb inferior) "
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(lldb inferior)
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If you want spacial separation you can run the inferior in one terminal then
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attach to it in another. Remember that while paused in the debugger, the inferior
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will not respond to input so you will have to ``continue`` in the debugger
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first.
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::
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(in terminal A)
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$ ./bin/lldb /tmp/test.o
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(in terminal B)
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$ ./bin/lldb ./bin/lldb --attach-pid $(pidof lldb)
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Placing Breakpoints
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*******************
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Generally you will want to hit some breakpoint in the inferior ``lldb``. To place
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that breakpoint you must first stop the inferior.
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If you're debugging from another window this is done with ``process interrupt``.
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The inferior will stop, you place the breakpoint and then ``continue``. Go back
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to the inferior and input the command that should trigger the breakpoint.
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If you are running debugger and inferior in the same window, input ``ctrl+c``
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instead of ``process interrupt`` and then folllow the rest of the steps.
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If you are doing this with ``lldb-server`` and find your breakpoint is never
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hit, check that you are breaking in code that is actually run by
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``lldb-server``. There are cases where code only used by ``lldb`` ends up
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linked into ``lldb-server``, so the debugger can break there but the breakpoint
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will never be hit.
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Debugging ``lldb-server``
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-------------------------
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Note: If you are on MacOS you are likely using ``debugserver`` instead of
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``lldb-server``. The spirit of these instructions applies but the specifics will
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be different.
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We suggest you read :doc:`/use/remote` before attempting to debug ``lldb-server``
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as working out exactly what you want to debug requires that you understand its
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various modes and behaviour. While you may not be literally debugging on a
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remote target, think of your host machine as the "remote" in this scenario.
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The ``lldb-server`` options for your situation will depend on what part of it
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or mode you are interested in. To work out what those are, recreate the scenario
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first without any extra debugging layers. Let's say we want to debug
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``lldb-server`` during the following command:
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::
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$ ./bin/lldb /tmp/test.o
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We can treat ``lldb-server`` as we treated ``lldb`` before, running it under
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``lldb``. The equivalent to having ``lldb`` launch the ``lldb-server`` for us is
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to start ``lldb-server`` in the ``gdbserver`` mode.
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The following commands recreate that, while debugging ``lldb-server``:
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::
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$ ./bin/lldb -- ./bin/lldb-server gdbserver :1234 /tmp/test.o
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(lldb) target create "./bin/lldb-server"
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Current executable set to '<...>/bin/lldb-server' (aarch64).
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<...>
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Process 1742485 launched: '<...>/bin/lldb-server' (aarch64)
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Launched '/tmp/test.o' as process 1742586...
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(in another terminal)
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$ ./bin/lldb /tmp/test.o -o "gdb-remote 1234"
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Note that the first ``lldb`` is the one debugging ``lldb-server``. The second
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``lldb`` is debugging ``/tmp/test.o`` and is only used to trigger the
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interesting code path in ``lldb-server``.
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This is another case where you may want to layout your terminals in a
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predictable way, or change the prompt of one or both copies of ``lldb``.
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If you are debugging a scenario where the ``lldb-server`` starts in ``platform``
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mode, but you want to debug the ``gdbserver`` mode you'll have to work out what
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subprocess it's starting for the ``gdbserver`` part. One way is to look at the
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list of runninng processes and take the command line from there.
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In theory it should be possible to use LLDB's
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``target.process.follow-fork-mode`` or GDB's ``follow-fork-mode`` to
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automatically debug the ``gdbserver`` process as it's created. However this
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author has not been able to get either to work in this scenario so we suggest
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making a more specific command wherever possible instead.
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Output From ``lldb-server``
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***************************
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As ``lldb-server`` often launches subprocesses, output messages may be hidden
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if they are emitted from the child processes.
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You can tell it to enable logging using the ``--log-channels`` option. For
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example ``--log-channels "posix ptrace"``. However that is not passed on to the
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child processes.
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The same goes for ``printf``. If it's called in a child process you won't see
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the output.
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In these cases consider either interactive debugging ``lldb-server`` or
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working out a more specific command such that it does not have to spawn a
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subprocess. For example if you start with ``platform`` mode, work out what
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``gdbserver`` mode process it spawns and run that command instead.
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Remote Debugging
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----------------
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If you want to debug part of LLDB running on a remote machine, the principals
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are the same but we will have to start debug servers, then attach debuggers to
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those servers.
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In the example below we're debugging an ``lldb-server`` ``gdbserver`` mode
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command running on a remote machine.
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For simplicity we'll use the same ``lldb-server`` as the debug server
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and the inferior, but it doesn't need to be that way. You can use ``gdbserver``
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(as in, GDB's debug server program) or a system installed ``lldb-server`` if you
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suspect your local copy is not stable. As is the case in many of these
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scenarios.
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::
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$ <...>/bin/lldb-server gdbserver 0.0.0.0:54322 -- \
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<...>/bin/lldb-server gdbserver 0.0.0.0:54321 -- /tmp/test.o
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Now we have a debug server listening on port 54322 of our remote (``0.0.0.0``
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means it's listening for external connections). This is where we will connect
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``lldb`` to, to debug the second ``lldb-server``.
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To trigger behaviour in the second ``lldb-server``, we will connect a second
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``lldb`` to port 54321 of the remote.
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This is the final configuration:
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::
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Host | Remote
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--------------------------------------------|--------------------
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lldb A debugs lldb-server on port 54322 -> | lldb-server A
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| (which runs)
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lldb B debugs /tmp/test.o on port 54321 -> | lldb-server B
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| (which runs)
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| /tmp/test.o
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You would use ``lldb A`` to place a breakpoint in the code you're interested in,
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then ``lldb B`` to trigger ``lldb-server B`` to go into that code and hit the
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breakpoint. ``lldb-server A`` is only here to let us debug ``lldb-server B``
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remotely.
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