from abc import ABCMeta, abstractmethod import lldb class ScriptedFrameProvider(metaclass=ABCMeta): """ The base class for a scripted frame provider. A scripted frame provider allows you to provide custom stack frames for a thread, which can be used to augment or replace the standard unwinding mechanism. This is useful for: - Providing frames for custom calling conventions or languages - Reconstructing missing frames from crash dumps or core files - Adding diagnostic or synthetic frames for debugging - Visualizing state machines or async execution contexts Most of the base class methods are `@abstractmethod` that need to be overwritten by the inheriting class. Example usage: .. code-block:: python # Attach a frame provider to a thread thread = process.GetSelectedThread() error = thread.SetScriptedFrameProvider( "my_module.MyFrameProvider", lldb.SBStructuredData() ) """ @staticmethod def applies_to_thread(thread): """Determine if this frame provider should be used for a given thread. This static method is called before creating an instance of the frame provider to determine if it should be applied to a specific thread. Override this method to provide custom filtering logic. Args: thread (lldb.SBThread): The thread to check. Returns: bool: True if this frame provider should be used for the thread, False otherwise. The default implementation returns True for all threads. Example: .. code-block:: python @staticmethod def applies_to_thread(thread): # Only apply to thread 1 return thread.GetIndexID() == 1 """ return True @staticmethod @abstractmethod def get_description(): """Get a description of this frame provider. This method should return a human-readable string describing what this frame provider does. The description is used for debugging and display purposes. Returns: str: A description of the frame provider. Example: .. code-block:: python def get_description(self): return "Crash log frame provider for thread 1" """ pass @staticmethod def get_priority(): """Get the priority of this frame provider. This static method is called to determine the evaluation order when multiple frame providers could apply to the same thread. Lower numbers indicate higher priority (like Unix nice values). Returns: int or None: Priority value where 0 is highest priority. Return None for default priority (UINT32_MAX - lowest priority). Example: .. code-block:: python @staticmethod def get_priority(): # High priority - runs before most providers return 10 @staticmethod def get_priority(): # Default priority - runs last return None """ return None # Default/lowest priority def __init__(self, input_frames, args): """Construct a scripted frame provider. Args: input_frames (lldb.SBFrameList): The frame list to use as input. This allows you to access frames by index. The frames are materialized lazily as you access them. args (lldb.SBStructuredData): A Dictionary holding arbitrary key/value pairs used by the scripted frame provider. """ self.input_frames = None self.args = None self.thread = None self.target = None self.process = None if isinstance(input_frames, lldb.SBFrameList) and input_frames.IsValid(): self.input_frames = input_frames self.thread = input_frames.GetThread() if self.thread and self.thread.IsValid(): self.process = self.thread.GetProcess() if self.process and self.process.IsValid(): self.target = self.process.GetTarget() if isinstance(args, lldb.SBStructuredData) and args.IsValid(): self.args = args @abstractmethod def get_frame_at_index(self, index): """Get a single stack frame at the given index. This method is called lazily when a specific frame is needed in the thread's backtrace (e.g., via the 'bt' command). Each frame is requested individually as needed. Args: index (int): The frame index to retrieve (0 for youngest/top frame). Returns: Dict or None: A frame dictionary describing the stack frame, or None if no frame exists at this index. The dictionary should contain: Required fields: - idx (int): The synthetic frame index (0 for youngest/top frame) - pc (int): The program counter address for the synthetic frame Alternatively, you can return: - A ScriptedFrame object for full control over frame behavior - An integer representing an input frame index to reuse - None to indicate no more frames exist Example: .. code-block:: python def get_frame_at_index(self, index): # Return None when there are no more frames if index >= self.total_frames: return None # Re-use an input frame by returning its index if self.should_use_input_frame(index): return index # Returns input frame at this index # Or create a custom frame dictionary if index == 0: return { "idx": 0, "pc": 0x100001234, } return None Note: The frames are indexed from 0 (youngest/top) to N (oldest/bottom). This method will be called repeatedly with increasing indices until None is returned. """ pass