lldb-mi
wasi-libc
lldb-mi | wasi-libc | |
---|---|---|
11 | 48 | |
150 | 797 | |
1.3% | 1.6% | |
4.6 | 7.7 | |
2 months ago | 20 days ago | |
C++ | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
lldb-mi
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My Personal Serverless Rust Developer Experience. It’s Better Than You Think
I'm on the record of loving the VSCode experience with Rust. And I do think that it's amazing that a "non-IDE" can feel so much like an IDE. However, I've recently pivoted off of that stance. I know it's still in EAP, but Rust Rover gives me all of the things that I get from VSCode plus an easier integration with LLDB.
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Taming the dragon: using llnode to debug your Node.js application
Fortunately, we can use this same technique with our Node.js applications! This is possible through llnode: a LLDB plugin which enables us to inspect Node.js core dumps. With llnode, we can inspect objects in the memory and look at the complete backtrace of the program, including native (C++) frames and JavaScript frames. It can be used on a running Node.js application or through a core dump.
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How to debug programs in console? (C program for example)
An alternative to gdb is lldb. But I like gdb.
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How to Debug WASI Pipelines with ITK-Wasm
The CMake-based, itk-wasm build system tooling enables the same C++ build system configuration and code to be reused when building a native system binary or a WebAssembly binary. As a result, native binary debugging tools, such as GDB, LLDB, or the Visual Studio debugger can be utilized.
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What is the debug drawer?
The debugger component of the LLVM project. It’s what you’re typing into when you type po someExpression. https://lldb.llvm.org/ Web searches could help explain a lot of this for you 😊
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Best debugger for windows? GDB is not stable and can't seem to find an alternative.
If you really don't want to touch Visual Studio/MSVC then you can try to compile with clang and use lldb: https://lldb.llvm.org/
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dap: configuration to automatically launch codelldb server
LLDB - https://lldb.llvm.org/ - Debugger from the LLVM project
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Debugging with GDB
Well, there's LLDB (https://lldb.llvm.org/) - I've heard it's got some nifty architectural features (e.g. having access to the Clang framework for handling C/C++ expressions).
I've done some minimal poking about in the code; I found its object-orientation a bit hard to grok (just for me personally) but it seemed to be quite uniformly applied so it might well be easier to work with.
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Write your GDB scripts in Haskell
The article does mention lldb as a future target.
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Kdevelop: Debug, "Could not run 'lldb-mi'
check if lldb-mi comes with lldb in your package manager. if not build it form here: https://github.com/lldb-tools/lldb-mi.
wasi-libc
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I am curious. How many of you work on a windows system?
Now there are projects like WASI that allows for interfacing with system resources for WASM code this allows for devs to target WASM runtime for their apps sliding the apps to run locally on any OS without any porting required. This could be a game changer in the future like Docker and containers was in the past decade.
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How to select some elements from array randomly?
So it doesn’t seem like there has been progress on a pseudo-random number generator function for typst, but there are multiple other ways to solve this: 1. Just don’t. Typst has this functional philosophy, there one input always produces the same output. (not an answer to your question tho) 2. Interface with a webassembly module which has a random number generator. So you could e.g. compile c to wasm and statically link a libc version. You would then just have to export the rand() function. (You could use any lang for this, which has a stdlib with a pseudo random number generator) 3. Implement your own. Random number generators are actually not that hard something like an LCG isn’t to complex. (Id provide an example but im on my phone rn)
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Lapce Editor v0.3 Released
Actually WASI[0] will be a better alternative, IIRC extism serialize and deserialize the data that you want to pass every time, adding a lot of overhead.
[0] https://wasi.dev
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Wasix, the Superset of WASI Supporting Threads, Processes and Sockets
Actually, it was in wasi-libc: https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-libc/blob/main/libc-bott...
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Valheim: Regarding Mods
Proper isolation in C# is only now becoming a thing, with .Net support for WASI, which is essentially a WebAssembly sandbox which can be given extremely granular privileges (such as access to spefic file system directories, or an effective virtual file system). As an upside, the idea is that it should be possible to write the WASI packages in more or less anything.
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Hardening Drupal with WebAssembly
Wasm Labs dev here :)
In mod_wasm, there are some differences with a pure CGI implementation. When Apache boots, it loads the configuration and initializes the WasmVM. When a new HTTP request arrives, the VM is ready so you don't need to initialize a different process to manage it.
You still need to process the request and pass the data to the Wasm module. This step is done via STDIN through the WebAssembly System Interface (WASI) implementation [0]. The same happens in the opposite direction, as the module returns the data via STDOUT.
So, the CGI pattern is still there, but it doesn't require new processes and all the code runs in a sandbox.
However this is not the only way you can run a Wasm module. In this specific case, we use CGI via WASI. In other cases, you may compile a module to fulfill a specific API, like ProxyWasm [1] to create HTTP filters for proxies like Envoy.
- [0] https://wasi.dev/
- [1] https://github.com/proxy-wasm/spec
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Compile emacs to wasm?
Never done that, but I think you need this: https://wasi.dev/
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Extending web applications with WebAssembly and Python
The Python builds from the WebAssembly language runtimes [0] project target the WebAssembly System Interfaces (WASI) [1]. It allows the Python interpreter to interact with resources like the filesystem.
Many server-side Wasm runtimes supports WASI out of the box. For the browser, you need to provide a polyfill to emulate these resources like the one provided by the WASI team [2].
Regarding SQLite, these builds include libsqlite so you should be able to use it :)
- [0] https://github.com/vmware-labs/webassembly-language-runtimes
- [1] https://wasi.dev/
- [2] https://wasi.dev/polyfill/
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How to Debug WASI Pipelines with ITK-Wasm
Effective debugging results in effective programming; itk-wasm makes effective debugging of WebAssembly possible. In this tutorial, adapted from the itk-wasm documentation, we walk through how to debug a C++ data processing pipeline with the mature, native binary debugging tools that are comfortable for developers. This is a fully featured way to ensure the base correctness of a processing pipeline. Next, we will walk through an interactive debugging experience for WASI WebAssembly. With itk-wasm, we can debug the same source code in either context with an interactive debugger. We also have a convenvient way to pass data from our local filesystem into a WebAssembly (Wasm) processing pipeline.
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Running Go code inside a NodeJS app with WASM (Part 1/2, 2023)
Communication between the WASM module and the rest of the application needs to be done in very simple types (bytes, ints and floats). No complex types are supported yet. This is why most WASM compilers also provide some glue-code to map between complex types like strings or arrays. The Web Assembly System Interface (WAS) is an on-progress standard aimed to solve this last limitation; once it's mature it will allow easy interoperation with almost every environment. WASI is already available in some WSAM compilers and runtimes.
What are some alternatives?
gef - GEF (GDB Enhanced Features) - a modern experience for GDB with advanced debugging capabilities for exploit devs & reverse engineers on Linux
wasm-bindgen - Facilitating high-level interactions between Wasm modules and JavaScript
gdb-dashboard - Modular visual interface for GDB in Python
wasi-sdk - WASI-enabled WebAssembly C/C++ toolchain
vscode-lldb - A native debugger extension for VSCode based on LLDB [Moved to: https://github.com/vadimcn/codelldb]
wasmer - 🚀 The leading Wasm Runtime supporting WASIX, WASI and Emscripten
CodeLLDB - A native debugger extension for VSCode based on LLDB
wasmtime - A fast and secure runtime for WebAssembly
rr - Record and Replay Framework
WASI - WebAssembly System Interface
voltron - A hacky debugger UI for hackers
binaryen - Optimizer and compiler/toolchain library for WebAssembly