Commit Graph

18 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ted Kremenek 4924a0161b Refactor clients of AnalyzerOptions::getBooleanOption() to have
an intermediate helper method to query and populate the Optional value.

llvm-svn: 165043
2012-10-02 20:42:16 +00:00
Ted Kremenek 3c6932922e Tweak AnalyzerOptions::getOptionAsInteger() to populate the string
table, making it printable with the ConfigDump checker.  Along the
way, fix a really serious bug where the value was getting parsed
from the string in code that was in an assert() call.  This means
in a Release-Asserts build this code wouldn't work as expected.

llvm-svn: 165041
2012-10-02 20:31:56 +00:00
Ted Kremenek 5faa5e04a3 Change AnalyzerOptions::mayInlineCXXMemberFunction to default populate
the config string table.  Also setup a test for dumping the analyzer
configuration for C++.

llvm-svn: 165040
2012-10-02 20:31:52 +00:00
Ted Kremenek 4a5b35eeec Have AnalyzerOptions::getBooleanOption() stick the matching config
string in the config table so that it can be dumped as part of the 
config dumper.  Add a test to show that these options are sticking
and can be cross-checked using FileCheck.

llvm-svn: 164954
2012-10-01 18:28:19 +00:00
Jordan Rose 52de8eec01 [analyzer] Suppress bugs whose paths go through the return of a null pointer.
This is a heuristic intended to greatly reduce the number of false
positives resulting from inlining, particularly inlining of generic,
defensive C++ methods that live in header files. The suppression is
triggered in the cases where we ask to track where a null pointer came
from, and it turns out that the source of the null pointer was an inlined
function call.

This change brings the number of bug reports in LLVM from ~1500 down to
around ~300, a much more manageable number. Yes, some true positives may
be hidden as well, but from what I looked at the vast majority of silenced
reports are false positives, and many of the true issues found by the
analyzer are still reported.

I'm hoping to improve this heuristic further by adding some exceptions
next week (cases in which a bug should still be reported).

llvm-svn: 164449
2012-09-22 01:25:06 +00:00
Ted Kremenek 61e2f2d6ec Re-enable faux-bodies by default.
Try this again, now that r164392 is in place.

llvm-svn: 164393
2012-09-21 17:55:34 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 443eef47ef Revert r164364, "Flip "faux-bodies" in the analyzer on by default to flush out bugs."
It crashed test/Analysis/Output/blocks.m on some hosts.

llvm-svn: 164368
2012-09-21 12:00:42 +00:00
Ted Kremenek e460a4ea2d Flip "faux-bodies" in the analyzer on by default to flush out bugs.
llvm-svn: 164364
2012-09-21 06:14:37 +00:00
Ted Kremenek 14f779c4d6 Implement faux-body-synthesis of well-known functions in the static analyzer when
their implementations are unavailable.  Start by simulating dispatch_sync().

This change is largely a bunch of plumbing around something very simple.  We
use AnalysisDeclContext to conjure up a fake function body (using the
current ASTContext) when one does not exist.  This is controlled
under the analyzer-config option "faux-bodies", which is off by default.

The plumbing in this patch is largely to pass the necessary machinery
around.  CallEvent needs the AnalysisDeclContextManager to get
the function definition, as one may get conjured up lazily.

BugReporter and PathDiagnosticLocation needed to be relaxed to handle
invalid locations, as the conjured body has no real source locations.
We do some primitive recovery in diagnostic generation to generate
some reasonable locations (for arrows and events), but it can be
improved.

llvm-svn: 164339
2012-09-21 00:09:11 +00:00
Jordan Rose a522f1cf8b Revert "[analyzer] Disable STL inlining. Blocked by PR13724."
While PR13724 is still an issue, it's not actually an issue in the STL.
We can keep this option around in case there turn out to be widespread
false positives due to poor modeling of the C++ standard library functions,
but for now we'd like to get more data.

This reverts r163633 / c6baadceec1d5148c20ee6c902a102233c547f62.

llvm-svn: 163647
2012-09-11 20:26:49 +00:00
Anna Zaks 464493fbf4 [analyzer] Disable STL inlining. Blocked by PR13724.
llvm-svn: 163633
2012-09-11 17:15:39 +00:00
Anna Zaks 1ded453e36 [analyzer] Turn stl inlining back on.
The one reported bug, which was exposed by stl inlining, is addressed in
r163558.

llvm-svn: 163574
2012-09-10 23:59:02 +00:00
Anna Zaks 5446f4dfb1 [analyzer] Add an option to enable/disable objc inlining.
llvm-svn: 163562
2012-09-10 22:56:41 +00:00
Anna Zaks 14ce52492f [analyzer] Add ipa-always-inline-size option (with 3 as the default).
The option allows to always inline very small functions, whose size (in
number of basic blocks) is set using -analyzer-config
ipa-always-inline-size option.

llvm-svn: 163558
2012-09-10 22:37:19 +00:00
Jordan Rose c6fcbf06a6 [analyzer] Make the defaults explicit for each of the new config options.
Also, document both new inlining options in IPA.txt.

llvm-svn: 163551
2012-09-10 21:54:24 +00:00
Jordan Rose 1e0e4001c8 [analyzer] For now, don't inline C++ standard library functions.
This is a (heavy-handed) solution to PR13724 -- until we know we can do
a good job inlining the STL, it's best to be consistent and not generate
more false positives than we did before. We can selectively whitelist
certain parts of the 'std' namespace that are known to be safe.

This is controlled by analyzer config option 'c++-stdlib-inlining', which
can be set to "true" or "false".

This commit also adds control for whether or not to inline any templated
functions (member or non-member), under the config option
'c++-template-inlining'. This option is currently on by default.

llvm-svn: 163548
2012-09-10 21:27:35 +00:00
Jordan Rose 6d671cc34a [analyzer] Always include destructors in the analysis CFG.
While destructors will continue to not be inlined (unless the analyzer
config option 'c++-inlining' is set to 'destructors'), leaving them out
of the CFG is an incomplete model of the behavior of an object, and
can cause false positive warnings (like PR13751, now working).

Destructors for temporaries are still not on by default, since
(a) we haven't actually checked this code to be sure it's fully correct
    (in particular, we probably need to be very careful with regard to
    lifetime-extension when a temporary is bound to a reference,
    C++11 [class.temporary]p5), and
(b) ExprEngine doesn't actually do anything when it sees a temporary
    destructor in the CFG -- not even invalidate the object region.

To enable temporary destructors, set the 'cfg-temporary-dtors' analyzer
config option to '1'. The old -cfg-add-implicit-dtors cc1 option, which
controlled all implicit destructors, has been removed.

llvm-svn: 163264
2012-09-05 22:55:23 +00:00
Jordan Rose 219c9d0dd3 [analyzer] Though C++ inlining is enabled, don't inline ctors and dtors.
More generally, this adds a new configuration option 'c++-inlining', which
controls which C++ member functions can be considered for inlining. This
uses the new -analyzer-config table, so the cc1 arguments will look like this:

... -analyzer-config c++-inlining=[none|methods|constructors|destructors]

Note that each mode implies that all the previous member function kinds
will be inlined as well; it doesn't make sense to inline destructors
without inlining constructors, for example.

The default mode is 'methods'.

llvm-svn: 163004
2012-08-31 17:06:49 +00:00