printf-like functions, both builtin functions and those in the
C library. The function-call checker now queries this attribute do
determine if we have a printf-like function, rather than scanning
through the list of "known functions IDs". However, there are 5
functions they are not yet "builtins", so the function-call checker
handles them specifically still:
- fprintf and vfprintf: the builtins mechanism cannot (yet)
express FILE* arguments, so these can't be encoded.
- NSLog: the builtins mechanism cannot (yet) express NSString*
arguments, so this (and NSLogv) can't be encoded.
- asprintf and vasprintf: these aren't part of the C99 standard
library, so we really shouldn't be defining them as builtins in
the general case (and we don't seem to have the machinery to make
them builtins only on certain targets and depending on whether
extensions are enabled).
llvm-svn: 64512
The effect is that if a variable is uninitialized along a branch (but initialized along another), at merge points it is considered uninitialized. Previously we had the opposite behavior. The new behavior is more conservative, and more in line with gcc's behavior.
llvm-svn: 48689
We accidentally were throttling the propagation of uninitialized state across
assignments (e.g. x = y). Thanks to Anders Carlsson for spotting this problem.
Added test cases to test suite to provide regression testing for the
uninitialized values analysis.
llvm-svn: 44306