This change replaces `unordered_set<unsigned>` (which used to store
internal representation of `SourceLocation`-s) with
`DenseSet<SourceLocation>` (which stores `SourceLocation`-s directly).
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, njames93
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94601
Migrates `change` to `changeTo`; changes to new constructor API (2-arg construct
+ `setRule`); refactors use of `addInclude` to newer version.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93695
readability-container-size-empty currently modifies source code based on
AST nodes in template instantiations, which means that it makes
transformations based on substituted types. This can lead to
transforming code to be broken.
Change the matcher implementation to ignore template instantiations
explicitly, and add a matcher to explicitly handle template declarations
instead of instantiations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91302
Modify the cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-member-init checker to ignore warnings from the move and copy-constructors when they are compiler defined with `= default` outside of the type declaration.
Reported as [LLVM bug 36819](https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36819)
Reviewed By: malcolm.parsons
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93333
This lint check is a part of the FLOCL (FPGA Linters for OpenCL)
project out of the Synergy Lab at Virginia Tech.
FLOCL is a set of lint checks aimed at FPGA developers who write code
in OpenCL.
The altera single work item barrier check finds OpenCL kernel functions
that call a barrier function but do not call an ID function. These
kernel functions will be treated as single work-item kernels, which
could be inefficient or lead to errors.
Based on the "Altera SDK for OpenCL: Best Practices Guide."
Currently errors detected when parsing the YAML for .clang-tidy files are always printed to errs.
For clang-tidy binary workflows this usually isn't an issue, but using clang-tidy as a library for integrations may want to handle displaying those errors in their own specific way.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92920
Extend the check to not only look at the variable the unnecessarily copied
variable is initialized from, but also ensure that any variable the old variable
references is not modified.
Extend DeclRefExprUtils to also count references and pointers to const assigned
from the DeclRef we check for const usages.
Reviewed-by: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91893
Using a MemoryBufferRef, If there is an error parsing, we can point the user to the location of the file.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93024
Add methods for emitting diagnostics with no location as well as a special diagnostic for configuration errors.
These show up in the errors as [clang-tidy-config].
The reason to use a custom name rather than the check name is to distinguish the error isn't the same category as the check that reported it.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91885
While casting an (integral) pointer to an integer is obvious - you just get
the integral value of the pointer, casting an integer to an (integral) pointer
is deceivingly different. While you will get a pointer with that integral value,
if you got that integral value via a pointer-to-integer cast originally,
the new pointer will lack the provenance information from the original pointer.
So while (integral) pointer to integer casts are effectively no-ops,
and are transparent to the optimizer, integer to (integral) pointer casts
are *NOT* transparent, and may conceal information from optimizer.
While that may be the intention, it is not always so. For example,
let's take a look at a routine to align the pointer up to the multiple of 16:
The obvious, naive implementation for that is:
```
char* src(char* maybe_underbiased_ptr) {
uintptr_t maybe_underbiased_intptr = (uintptr_t)maybe_underbiased_ptr;
uintptr_t aligned_biased_intptr = maybe_underbiased_intptr + 15;
uintptr_t aligned_intptr = aligned_biased_intptr & (~15);
return (char*)aligned_intptr; // warning: avoid integer to pointer casts [misc-no-inttoptr]
}
```
The check will rightfully diagnose that cast.
But when provenance concealment is not the goal of the code, but an accident,
this example can be rewritten as follows, without using integer to pointer cast:
```
char*
tgt(char* maybe_underbiased_ptr) {
uintptr_t maybe_underbiased_intptr = (uintptr_t)maybe_underbiased_ptr;
uintptr_t aligned_biased_intptr = maybe_underbiased_intptr + 15;
uintptr_t aligned_intptr = aligned_biased_intptr & (~15);
uintptr_t bias = aligned_intptr - maybe_underbiased_intptr;
return maybe_underbiased_ptr + bias;
}
```
See also:
* D71499
* [[ https://www.cs.utah.edu/~regehr/oopsla18.pdf | Juneyoung Lee, Chung-Kil Hur, Ralf Jung, Zhengyang Liu, John Regehr, and Nuno P. Lopes. 2018. Reconciling High-Level Optimizations and Low-Level Code in LLVM. Proc. ACM Program. Lang. 2, OOPSLA, Article 125 (November 2018), 28 pages. ]]
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91055
The check 'cppcoreguidelines-narrowing-conversions' does not detect conversions
involving typedef. This notably includes the standard fixed-width integer types
like int32_t, uint64_t, etc. Now look through the typedefs at the desugared type.
This extends the check for default initialization in arrays added in
547f89d607 to include scalar types and exclude them from the suggested fix for
make_unique/make_shared.
Rewriting std::unique_ptr<int>(new int) as std::make_unique<int>() (or for
other, similar trivial T) switches from default initialization to value
initialization, a performance regression for trivial T. For these use cases,
std::make_unique_for_overwrite is more suitable alternative.
Reviewed By: hokein
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90392
Commit fbdff6f3ae0b in the Abseil tree adds an overload for
absl::StrContains to accept a single character needle for optimized
lookups.
Reviewed By: hokein
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92810
A number of declarations were leftover after the move from `clang::tooling` to
`clang::transformer`. This patch removes those declarations and upgrades the
handful of references to the deprecated declarations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92340
Checks for some thread-unsafe functions against a black list
of known-to-be-unsafe functions. Usually they access static variables
without synchronization (e.g. gmtime(3)) or utilize signals
in a racy way (e.g. sleep(3)).
The patch adds a check instead of auto-fix as thread-safe alternatives
usually have API with an additional argument
(e.g. gmtime(3) v.s. gmtime_r(3)) or have a different semantics
(e.g. exit(3) v.s. __exit(3)), so it is a rather tricky
or non-expected fix.
An option specifies which functions in libc should be considered
thread-safe, possible values are `posix`, `glibc`,
or `any` (the most strict check). It defaults to 'any' as it is
unknown what target libc type is - clang-tidy may be run
on linux but check sources compiled for other *NIX.
The check is used in Yandex Taxi backend and has caught
many unpleasant bugs. A similar patch for coroutine-unsafe API
is coming next.
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90944
The module will contain checks related to concurrent programming (including threads, fibers, coroutines, etc.).
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91656
This is partly in preparation for an upcoming change that can change the
order in which DeclContext lookup results are presented.
In passing, fix some obvious errors where name lookup's notion of a
"static member function" missed static member function templates, and
where its notion of "same set of declarations" was confused by the same
declarations appearing in a different order.
The idea of suppressing naming checks for variables is to support code bases that allow short variables named e.g 'x' and 'i' without prefix/suffixes or casing styles. This was originally proposed as a 'ShortSizeThreshold' however has been made more generic with a regex to suppress identifier naming checks for those that match.
Reviewed By: njames93, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90282
Current check compiles the regex on every attempt at matching. The check also populates and enables a regex value by default so the default behaviour results in regex re-compilation for every macro - if the check is enabled. If people used this check there's a reasonable chance they would have relatively complex regexes in use.
This is a quick and simple fix to store and use the compiled regex.
Reviewed By: njames93
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91908
I saw this crash in our internal production, but unfortunately didn't get
reproduced testcase, we likely hit this crash when the AST is ill-formed
(e.g. broken code).
Reviewed By: gribozavr2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91614
std::string_view("") produces a string_view instance that compares
equal to std::string_view(), but requires more complex initialization
(storing the address of the string literal, rather than zeroing).
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91009
Consider this code:
```
if (Cond) {
#ifdef X_SUPPORTED
X();
#else
return;
#endif
} else {
Y();
}
Z();```
In this example, if `X_SUPPORTED` is not defined, currently we'll get a warning from the else-after-return check. However If we apply that fix, and then the code is recompiled with `X_SUPPORTED` defined, we have inadvertently changed the behaviour of the if statement due to the else being removed. Code flow when `Cond` is `true` will be:
```
X();
Y();
Z();```
where as before the fix it was:
```
X();
Z();```
This patch adds checks that guard against `#endif` directives appearing between the control flow interrupter and the else and not applying the fix if they are detected.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91485
Do not warn for "pointer to aggregate" in a `sizeof(A) / sizeof(A[0])`
expression if `A` is an array of pointers. This is the usual way of
calculating the array length even if the array is of pointers.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91543
This allows for matching the constructors std::string has in common with
std::string_view.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91015
Adds support for setting the `Rule` field. In the process, refactors the code that accesses that field and adds a constructor that doesn't require a rule argument.
This feature is needed by checks that must set the rule *after* the check class
is constructed. For example, any check that maintains state to be accessed from
the rule needs this support. Since the object's fields are not initialized when
the superclass constructor is called, they can't be (safely) captured by a rule
passed to the existing constructor. This patch allows constructing the check
superclass fully before setting the rule.
As a driveby fix, removed the "optional" from the rule, since rules are just a
set of cases, so empty rules are evident.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91544
LLVM style puts both gtest and gmock to the end of the include list.
But llvm-include-order-check was only moving gtest headers to the end, resulting
in a false tidy-warning.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91602
This fixes false positive cases where a non-const reference is passed to a
std::function but interpreted as a const reference.
Fix the definition of the fake std::function added in the test to match
std::function and make the bug reproducible.
Reviewed-by: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90042
Changed `ClangTidyOptions::mergeWith` to operate on the instance instead of returning a copy. The old mergeWith method has been renamed to merge and marked as nodiscard, to aid in disambiguating which one is which.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91184
By iterating backwards over the globs we can exit the loop as soon as we find a match.
While we're here:
- Regex doesn't need to be mutable.
- We can reserve the amount of Globs needed ahead of time.
- Using a SmallVector with size 0 is slightly more space efficient than a std::vector.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91033