Microsoft MVP성태의 닷넷 이야기
How to get a V2.0 ICorDebug object [링크 복사], [링크+제목 복사],
조회: 9329
글쓴 사람
정성태 (techsharer at outlook.com)
홈페이지
첨부 파일
 

[출처] https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/archive/blogs/jmstall/how-to-get-a-v2-0-icordebug-object

결국 "온고지신"이라는 말이 떠오릅니다.
COM과 Win32 API는 보이지만 않게 될 뿐, 여전히 하부에서 존재하고 있습니다.


How to get a V2.0 ICorDebug object

I think the biggest breaking change in the ICorDebug API is how we deal with versioning.

Managed debugging is done via the com-classic ICorDebug interface.

 

In v1.0/v1.1, you cocreate to get an ICorDebug implementation, like so:

 

        ICorDebug * cor;

        hr = CoCreateInstance(CLSID_CorDebug, NULL,

                              CLSCTX_INPROC_SERVER,

                              IID_ICorDebug,

                              (void **)&cor);

 

This has a few problems:

-         COM activation is evil because it means a more complex setup to update the registry. This allows bugs like “you need to reregister mscordbi.dll”. A quick google search shows that people hit this problem enough.

-         there are no version parameters in here

 

In v2.0, there is no longer a com coclass for ICorDebug. We still use the com-class ICorDebug interfaces, but we don’t use COM activation anymore. You now call a new API defined in mscoree.idl:

STDAPI CreateDebuggingInterfaceFromVersion(

int iDebuggerVersion,

LPCWSTR szDebuggeeVersion,

IUnknown ** ppCordb);

 

This takes version parameters. iDebuggerVersion is a constant from CorDebug.idl specifying the version of the API the client is built against.  szDebuggeeVersion is the version string of the debuggee. 

*ppCordb is an out parameter for the newly allocated com-object.

 

Here’s some sample code to use the new API:

 

    // Sample code to get an ICorDebug instance to debug v1.1.

    typedef HRESULT (STDAPICALLTYPE *FPCreateCordb)(int iDebuggerVersion, LPCWSTR szDebuggeeVersion, IUnknown ** ppCordb);

 

    // Must late bind to CreateDebuggingInterfaceFromVersion since it may not be installed.

    HMODULE hMscoree = LoadLibraryA("mscoree.dll");

    if (hMscoree == null) { /* Serious error, v2.0 runtime is not installed! */ }

    FPCreateCordb fpCreateCordb = (FPCreateCordb) GetProcAddress(m_hMscoree, "CreateDebuggingInterfaceFromVersion");

    if (fpCreateCordb == NULL) {  /* fail */ }

 

    const char * szDebuggeeVersion = “v1.1.4322”; // if we’re debugging a v1.1 debuggee

    const int iDebuggerVersion = CorDebugVersion_2_0; // if we’re a v2.0 debugger.

    hr = fpCreateCordb(CorDebugVersion_2_0, szEverettVersion, &pObject);

    if (FAILED(hr)) { /* fail */ }

 

    ICorDebug * cor;

    hr = pObject->QueryInterface(IID_ICorDebug, (void**) &cor);

    if (FAILED(hr)) { /* fail */ }

 

Note that MDbg in the beta 1 sample is still using the old API, but we’ve updated it in the beta2 release.

 

Why the change?

The debugging services in V1 didn’t have a good versioning plan. The original idea was that the debugger would just create a single instance of ICorDebug (via CoCreate) and that would emulate all other versions as needed.

This was a bad idea.

That means if you have an v1 debugger on a v1 debuggee, you’ll use the v1 implementation of ICorDebug. As soon as you install a v2 CLR, that scenario is automatically updated to use a V2 implementation of ICorDebug.

If that new implementation doesn’t perfectly emulate the old one, then the mere act of installing a new v2 runtime would have broken a pure v1 scenario.

The test matrix also explodes very quickly. We’d have to test every version against every previous version.

 

ICorDebug design flaws also prevent us from shimming implementations underneath the interface either. We don’t know the version of the debuggee until a CreateProcess callback is dispatched, but there’s still a lot of functionality before that callback (including interop-debugging support).

 

We concluded the only viable alternative was to keep 1 version of the ICorDebug implementation  per CLR. With the new APIs, installing a new CLR does not have any impact on the what happens to the debugging pipeline of existing apps. You’ll also notice now that the version of mscordbi.dll in the debugger will always strictly match the version of mscorwks.dll in the debuggee. So when a v2.0 debugger is debugging a v1.0 application, it loads the v1.0 mscordbi. (Unfortunately, this will be a problem for debuggers implemented in managed code. See here for details.).

 

This ugliness is an example of the consequence of not really thinking about versioning until v2.0.

 

Issues with the new design:

The biggest immediate problem with the new design is where do you get the debuggee’s version string from? The debugger needs to predict the debuggee’s version before it launches it. There are a few APIs in mscoree.idl to help with this:

1)      GetCORVersion   this will get the version string for the currently executing process. This works fine if the debugger + debuggee have the same version. (This is what beta 1 MDbg does.)

2)      GetRequestedRuntimeVersion   this predict the version string from an executable on disk based off policy settings, config files, etc. This will always be accurate for a pure-managed app like C#.

3)      GetVersionFromProcess   this will find the version string from a currently running process. This API was added in v2.0 to explicitly support this scenario.

 

There are of course cases where there’s no way to predict the version string. Consider a pure native app that pops up a dialog box asking the user which runtime to bind to and then calls CorBindToRuntimeEx on the fly.

 

All this said, we considered these limitations doable given the scenarios we wanted to support.

 

Published Saturday, January 15, 2005 5:02 PM by jmstall
Filed Under: ,






[최초 등록일: ]
[최종 수정일: 6/16/2021]


비밀번호

댓글 작성자
 




... 16  17  18  19  20  21  [22]  23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30  ...
NoWriterDateCnt.TitleFile(s)
650정성태2/17/200710047TFS : 82. ASP.NET - Team Build 후에 파일 복사
649정성태2/13/200710066TFS : 81. 팀빌드 속도 향상 방법
648정성태2/13/200711545Vista : 36. Private Namespaces 사용하는 방법
647정성태2/13/20079665TFS : 80. 팀빌드 - 상세 오류 남기는 방법
646정성태2/13/20079769개발 환경 구성: 77. Synchronization Services for ADO.NET Documentation [1]
645정성태2/13/200710189TFS : 79. 코드 리뷰
644정성태2/10/200710156TFS : 78. Workspace 캐시 삭제
643정성태2/9/20079954TFS : 77. 사용자 정의 WorkItem 만들기
642정성태2/9/20079577TFS : 76. 이벤트 구독 도구 (사용자 정의)
641정성태2/9/200711377Visual C++ : 8. VC++ 런타임 배포 패키지를 silent mode로 설치
640정성태2/9/200710587.NET 3.5 : 4. System.Collections.Generic.HashSet<T> 소개
639정성태2/8/200710556.NET 3.5 : 3. System.Numeric.BigInteger 소개
638정성태2/8/200710410Vista : 35. 팁 관련 모음
637정성태2/13/20079829개발 환경 구성: 76. "Red and Green" model
636정성태2/8/20079829Vista : 34. IE 재시작 방법
635정성태2/8/200710418Vista : 33. Restart Manager
634정성태2/8/200710877Vista : 32. 특정 레지스트리 키에 대해 "가상화" 지원 여부를 알아내는 방법
633정성태2/7/200710634개발 환경 구성: 75. 32비트 운영체제에서 64비트 비스타 운영체제 설치 불가
632정성태2/6/200710794.NET 3.0 : 13. WPF 응용 프로그램을 지역화하는 방법
631정성태2/6/20079924TFS : 75. 팀 빌드에서 원하는 소스 폴더만을 내려받도록 구성.
630정성태2/6/200710146.NET 3.0 : 12. WCF 와 XmlSerializer
629정성태2/4/20079652Vista : 31. 보안 테스트 관련 기사
628정성태2/4/200710190개발 환경 구성: 74. VS.NET - 매크로 함수 내에서 클립보드 API 사용
627정성태2/2/20079497개발 환경 구성: 73. ASP.NET Ajax Demo Site
626정성태2/2/20079815TFS : 74. TFS Proxy 설정 유틸리티
625정성태2/2/20079605TFS : 73. Team System 관련 유틸리티 목록
... 16  17  18  19  20  21  [22]  23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30  ...