jasonmolenda added a comment. Sorry for missing this back in August.
I think it'd be clearer to import your python once in the startup, like -o "script import $module" \ Multiple imports are a no-op IIUC so it's harmless to re-import the module every time the breakpoint is hit (I'm guessing it's only hit once, for that matter), but I think it's clearer to have this on its own line. For what it's worth, if you use breakpoint command add -F python-function, your function is passed in the frame as well as the SBBreakpointLocation. See 'help breakpoint add' for more information about this; I used this in a breakpoint python command I wrote a while back, def handle_pthread_create_return(frame, bp_loc, dict): global pthreads_being_created thread_index_id = frame.GetThread().GetIndexID() [...] it might be a good idea to name the breakpoint you're adding and then you can delete it explicitly, in case the user is doing something unexpected with breakpoints. e.g. % ~/k/svn/lldb/build/Debug/lldb /tmp/a.out (lldb) target create "/tmp/a.out" Current executable set to '/tmp/a.out' (x86_64). (lldb) br s -n main -N worker Breakpoint 1: where = a.out`main, address = 0x0000000100000ec0 (lldb) br del worker 1 breakpoints deleted; 0 breakpoint locations disabled. (lldb) br li No breakpoints currently set. (lldb) https://reviews.llvm.org/D36347 _______________________________________________ lldb-commits mailing list lldb-commits@lists.llvm.org http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/lldb-commits