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193 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
193 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
*dev_tools.txt* Nvim
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NVIM REFERENCE MANUAL
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Tools and techniques for developing Nvim *dev-tools*
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The following advice is helpful when working on or debugging issues with Nvim
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itself. See also |debug.txt| for advice that applies to Vim.
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Type |gO| to see the table of contents.
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==============================================================================
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Backtraces *dev-tools-backtrace*
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LINUX ~
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Core dumps are disabled by default on Ubuntu
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https://stackoverflow.com/a/18368068, CentOS and others. To enable core dumps:
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>bash
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ulimit -c unlimited
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<
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On systemd-based systems getting a backtrace is as easy as:
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>bash
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coredumpctl -1 gdb
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<
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It's an optional tool, so you may need to install it:
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>bash
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sudo apt install systemd-coredump
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<
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The full backtrace is most useful, send us the `bt.txt` file:
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>bash
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2>&1 coredumpctl -1 gdb | tee -a bt.txt
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thread apply all bt full
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<
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On older systems a `core` file will appear in the current directory. To get
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a backtrace from the `core` file:
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>bash
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gdb build/bin/nvim core 2>&1 | tee backtrace.txt
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thread apply all bt full
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<
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MACOS
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If `nvim` crashes, you can see the backtrace in `Console.app` (under "Crash
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Reports" or "User Diagnostic Reports" for older macOS versions).
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>bash
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open -a Console
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<
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You may also want to enable core dumps on macOS. To do this, first make sure
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the `/cores/` directory exists and is writable:
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>bash
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sudo mkdir /cores
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sudo chown root:admin /cores
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sudo chmod 1775 /cores
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<
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Then set the core size limit to `unlimited`:
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>bash
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ulimit -c unlimited
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<
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Note that this is done per shell process. If you want to make this the default
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for all shells, add the above line to your shell's init file (e.g. `~/.bashrc`
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or similar).
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You can then open the core file in `lldb`:
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>bash
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lldb -c /cores/core.12345
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<
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Apple's documentation archive has some other useful information
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https://developer.apple.com/library/archive/technotes/tn2124/_index.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/DTS10003391-CH1-SECCOREDUMPS,
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but note that some of the things on this page are out of date (such as enabling
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core dumps with `/etc/launchd.conf`).
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==============================================================================
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Gdb *dev-tools-gdb*
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USING GDB TO STEP THROUGH FUNCTIONAL TESTS ~
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Use `TEST_TAG` to run tests matching busted tags (of the form `#foo` e.g.
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`it("test #foo ...", ...)`):
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>bash
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GDB=1 TEST_TAG=foo make functionaltest
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<
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Then, in another terminal:
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>bash
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gdb build/bin/nvim
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target remote localhost:7777
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<
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- See also test/functional/helpers.lua https://github.com/neovim/neovim/blob/3098b18a2b63a841351f6d5e3697cb69db3035ef/test/functional/helpers.lua#L38-L44.
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USING LLDB TO STEP THROUGH UNIT TESTS ~
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>bash
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lldb .deps/usr/bin/luajit -- .deps/usr/bin/busted --lpath="./build/?.lua" test/unit/
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<
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USING GDB ~
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To attach to a running `nvim` process with a pid of 1234:
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>bash
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gdb -tui -p 1234 build/bin/nvim
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<
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The `gdb` interactive prompt will appear. At any time you can:
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- `break foo` to set a breakpoint on the `foo()` function
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- `n` to step over the next statement
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- `<Enter>` to repeat the last command
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- `s` to step into the next statement
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- `c` to continue
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- `finish` to step out of the current function
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- `p zub` to print the value of `zub`
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- `bt` to see a backtrace (callstack) from the current location
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- `CTRL-x CTRL-a` or `tui enable` to show a TUI view of the source file in the
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current debugging context. This can be extremely useful as it avoids the
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need for a gdb "frontend".
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- `<up>` and `<down>` to scroll the source file view
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GDB "REVERSE DEBUGGING" ~
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- `set record full insn-number-max unlimited`
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- `continue` for a bit (at least until `main()` is executed
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- `record`
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- provoke the bug, then use `revert-next`, `reverse-step`, etc. to rewind the
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debugger
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USING GDBSERVER ~
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You may want to connect multiple `gdb` clients to the same running `nvim`
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process, or you may want to connect to a remote `nvim` process with a local
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`gdb`. Using `gdbserver`, you can attach to a single process and control it
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from multiple `gdb` clients.
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Open a terminal and start `gdbserver` attached to `nvim` like this:
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>bash
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gdbserver :6666 build/bin/nvim 2> gdbserver.log
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<
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`gdbserver` is now listening on port 6666. You then need to attach to this
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debugging session in another terminal:
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>bash
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gdb build/bin/nvim
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<
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Once you've entered `gdb`, you need to attach to the remote session:
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>
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target remote localhost:6666
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<
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In case gdbserver puts the TUI as a background process, the TUI can become
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unable to read input from pty (and receives SIGTTIN signal) and/or output data
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(SIGTTOU signal). To force the TUI as the foreground process, you can add
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>
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signal (SIGTTOU, SIG_IGN);
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if (!tcsetpgrp(data->input.in_fd, getpid())) {
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perror("tcsetpgrp failed");
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}
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<
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to `tui.c:terminfo_start`.
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USING GDBSERVER IN TMUX ~
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Consider using a custom makefile
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https://github.com/neovim/neovim/blob/master/BUILD.md#custom-makefile to
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quickly start debugging sessions using the `gdbserver` method mentioned above.
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This example `local.mk` will create the debugging session when you type `make
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debug`.
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>make
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.PHONY: dbg-start dbg-attach debug build
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build:
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@$(MAKE) nvim
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dbg-start: build
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@tmux new-window -n 'dbg-neovim' 'gdbserver :6666 ./build/bin/nvim -D'
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dbg-attach:
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@tmux new-window -n 'dbg-cgdb' 'cgdb -x gdb_start.sh ./build/bin/nvim'
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debug: dbg-start dbg-attach
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<
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Here `gdb_start.sh` includes `gdb` commands to be called when the debugger
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starts. It needs to attach to the server started by the `dbg-start` rule. For
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example:
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>
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target remote localhost:6666
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br main
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<
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vim:tw=78:ts=8:et:ft=help:norl:
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