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Commit 92adcac9 authored by Sean Callanan's avatar Sean Callanan
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Implemented a major overhaul of the way variables are handled

by LLDB.  Instead of being materialized into the input structure
passed to the expression, variables are left in place and pointers
to them are materialzied into the structure.  Variables not resident
in memory (notably, registers) get temporary memory regions allocated
for them.

Persistent variables are the most complex part of this, because they
are made in various ways and there are different expectations about
their lifetime.  Persistent variables now have flags indicating their
status and what the expectations for longevity are.  They can be
marked as residing in target memory permanently -- this is the
default for result variables from expressions entered on the command
line and for explicitly declared persistent variables (but more on
that below).  Other result variables have their memory freed.

Some major improvements resulting from this include being able to
properly take the address of variables, better and cleaner support
for functions that return references, and cleaner C++ support in
general.  One problem that remains is the problem of explicitly
declared persistent variables; I have not yet implemented the code
that makes references to them into indirect references, so currently
materialization and dematerialization of these variables is broken.

llvm-svn: 123371
parent 02cde7ff
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