Summary:
This checker verifies if default placement new is provided with pointers
to sufficient storage capacity.
Noncompliant Code Example:
#include <new>
void f() {
short s;
long *lp = ::new (&s) long;
}
Based on SEI CERT rule MEM54-CPP
https://wiki.sei.cmu.edu/confluence/display/cplusplus/MEM54-CPP.+Provide+placement+new+with+properly+aligned+pointe
This patch does not implement checking of the alignment.
Reviewers: NoQ, xazax.hun
Subscribers: mgorny, whisperity, xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet,
rnkovacs, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, donat
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71612
Method '-[NSCoder decodeValueOfObjCType:at:]' is not only deprecated
but also a security hazard, hence a loud check.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71728
MallocChecker warns when memory is passed into -[NSData initWithBytesNoCopy]
but isn't allocated by malloc(), because it will be deallocated by free().
However, initWithBytesNoCopy has an overload that takes an arbitrary block
for deallocating the object. If such overload is used, it is no longer
necessary to make sure that the memory is allocated by malloc().
This is useful for clients that are relying on linearized CFGs for evaluating
subexpressions and want the default initializer to be evaluated properly.
The upcoming lifetime analysis is using this but it might also be useful
for the static analyzer at some point.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71642
This canonicalizes the representation of unknown pointer symbols,
which reduces the overall confusion in pointer cast representation.
Patch by Vince Bridgers!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70836
This patch introduces the namespaces for the configured functions and
also enables the use of the member functions.
I added an optional Scope field for every configured function. Functions
without Scope match for every function regardless of the namespace.
Functions with Scope will match if the full name of the function starts
with the Scope.
Multiple functions can exist with the same name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70878
Some AST nodes which stands for implicit initialization is shared. The analyzer
will do the same evaluation on the same nodes resulting in the same state. The
analyzer will "cache out", i.e. it thinks that it visited an already existing
node in the exploded graph. This is not true in this case and we lose coverage.
Since these nodes do not really require any processing from the analyzer
we just omit them from the CFG.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71371
This patch introduced additional PointerEscape callbacks after conservative
calls for output parameters. This should not really affect the current
checkers but the upcoming FuchsiaHandleChecker relies on this heavily.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71224
The checker was trying to analyze the body of every method in Objective-C
@implementation clause but the sythesized accessor stubs that were introduced
into it by 2073dd2d have no bodies.
While analyzing code `memcmp(a, NULL, n);', where `a' has an unconstrained
symbolic value, the analyzer was emitting a warning about the *first* argument
being a null pointer, even though we'd rather have it warn about the *second*
argument.
This happens because CStringChecker first checks whether the two argument
buffers are in fact the same buffer, in order to take the fast path.
This boils down to assuming `a == NULL' to true. Then the subsequent check
for null pointer argument "discovers" that `a' is null.
Don't take the fast path unless we are *sure* that the buffers are the same.
Otherwise proceed as normal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71322
Sometimes the return value of a comparison operator call is
`UnkownVal`. Since no assumptions can be made on `UnknownVal`,
this leeds to keeping impossible execution paths in the
exploded graph resulting in poor performance and false
positives. To overcome this we replace unknown results of
iterator comparisons by conjured symbols.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70244
Debugging the Iterator Modeling checker or any of the iterator checkers
is difficult without being able to see the relations between the
iterator variables and their abstract positions, as well as the abstract
symbols denoting the begin and the end of the container.
This patch adds the checker-specific part of the Program State printing
to the Iterator Modeling checker.
It was a step in the right direction but it is not clear how can this
fit into the checker API at this point. The pre-escape happens in the
analyzer core and the checker has no control over it. If the checker
is not interestd in a pre-escape it would need to do additional work
on each escape to check if the escaped symbol is originated from an
"uninteresting" pre-escaped memory region. In order to keep the
checker API simple we abandoned this solution for now.
We will reland this once we have a better answer for what to do on the
checker side.
This reverts commit f3a28202ef.
We want to escape all symbols that are stored into escaped regions.
The problem is, we did not know which local regions were escaped. Until now.
This should fix some false positives like the one in the tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71152
When implementation of the block runtime is available, we should not
warn that block layout fields are uninitialized simply because they're
on the stack.
Fix a crash when constructing a body farm for accessors of a property
that is declared and @synthesize'd in different (but related) interfaces
with the explicit ivar syntax.
This is a follow-up for 0b58b80e.
This patch is the last of the series of patches which allow the user to
annotate their functions with taint propagation rules.
I implemented the use of the configured filtering functions. These
functions can remove taintedness from the symbols which are passed at
the specified arguments to the filters.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59516
Fix a canonicalization problem for the newly added property accessor stubs that
was causing a wrong decl to be used for 'self' in the accessor's body farm.
Fix a crash when constructing a body farm for accessors of a property
that is declared and @synthesize'd in different (but related) interfaces.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70158
Push the test separately ahead of time in order to find out whether
our Memory Sanitizer bots will be able to find the problem.
If not, I'll add a much more expensive test that repeats the current
test multiple times in order to show up on normal buildbots.
I really apologize for the potential temporary inconvenience!
I'll commit the fix as soon as I get the signal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69962
The recently committed debug.IteratorDebugging checker enables
standalone white-box testing of the modelling of containers and
iterators. For the three checkers based on iterator modelling only
simple tests are needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70123
When bugreporter::trackExpressionValue() is invoked on a DeclRefExpr,
it tries to do most of its computations over the node in which
this DeclRefExpr is computed, rather than on the error node (or whatever node
is stuffed into it). One reason why we can't simply use the error node is
that the binding to that variable might have already disappeared from the state
by the time the bug is found.
In case of the inlined defensive checks visitor, the DeclRefExpr node
is in fact sometimes too *early*: the call in which the inlined defensive check
has happened might have not been entered yet.
Change the visitor to be fine with tracking dead symbols (which it is totally
capable of - the collapse point for the symbol is still well-defined), and fire
it up directly on the error node. Keep using "LVState" to find out which value
should we be tracking, so that there weren't any problems with accidentally
loading an ill-formed value from a dead variable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67932
This patch is motivated by (and factored out from)
https://reviews.llvm.org/D66121 which is a debug info bugfix. Starting
with DWARF 5 all Objective-C methods are nested inside their
containing type, and that patch implements this for synthesized
Objective-C properties.
1. SemaObjCProperty populates a list of synthesized accessors that may
need to inserted into an ObjCImplDecl.
2. SemaDeclObjC::ActOnEnd inserts forward-declarations for all
accessors for which no override was provided into their
ObjCImplDecl. This patch does *not* synthesize AST function
*bodies*. Moving that code from the static analyzer into Sema may
be a good idea though.
3. Places that expect all methods to have bodies have been updated.
I did not update the static analyzer's inliner for synthesized
properties to point back to the property declaration (see
test/Analysis/Inputs/expected-plists/nullability-notes.m.plist), which
I believed to be more bug than a feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68108
rdar://problem/53782400
For white-box testing correct container and iterator modelling it is essential
to access the internal data structures stored for container and iterators. This
patch introduces a simple debug checkers called debug.IteratorDebugging to
achieve this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67156
Namely, for the following items:
- Handle constructors within new[];
- Handle constructors for default arguments.
Update the open projects page with a link to the newly added tests
and more hints for potential contributors.
Patch by Daniel Krupp!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69308
- Fix false positive reports of strlcat.
- The return value of strlcat and strlcpy is now correctly calculated.
- The resulting string length of strlcat and strlcpy is now correctly
calculated.
Patch by Daniel Krupp!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66049
The static analyzer's scan-build script is critical infrastructure but
is not well tested. To start to address this, add a new test directory under
tests/Analysis for scan-build lit tests and seed it with several tests. The
goal is that future scan-build changes will be accompanied by corresponding
tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69781
Summary:
Recognization of function names is done now with the CallDescription
class instead of using IdentifierInfo. This means function name and
argument count is compared too.
A new check for filtering not global-C-functions was added.
Test was updated.
Reviewers: Szelethus, NoQ, baloghadamsoftware, Charusso
Reviewed By: Szelethus, NoQ, Charusso
Subscribers: rnkovacs, xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, donat.nagy, Charusso, dkrupp, Szelethus, gamesh411, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67706
Member operator declarations and member operator expressions
have different numbering of parameters and arguments respectively:
one of them includes "this", the other does not.
Account for this inconsistency when figuring out whether
the parameter needs to be manually rebound from the Environment
to the Store when entering a stack frame of an operator call,
as opposed to being constructed with a constructor and as such
already having the necessary Store bindings.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69155
The '->' thing has always been confusing; the actual operation '->'
translates to a pointer dereference together with adding a FieldRegion,
but FieldRegion on its own doesn't imply an additional pointer
dereference.
llvm-svn: 375281
One of the first attempts to reduce the size of the exploded graph dumps
was to skip the state dump as long as the state is the same as in all of
the predecessor nodes. With all the new facilities in place (node joining,
diff dumps), this feature doesn't do much, and when it does,
it's more harmful than useful. Let's remove it.
llvm-svn: 375280
The joined nodes now actually have the same state. That was intended
from the start but the original implementation turned out to be buggy.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69150
llvm-svn: 375278
ExplodedGraph nodes will now have a numeric identifier stored in them
which will keep track of the order in which the nodes were created
and it will be fully deterministic both accross runs and across machines.
This is extremely useful for debugging as it allows reliably setting
conditional breakpoints by node IDs.
llvm-svn: 375186
Because cast expressions have their own hierarchy, it's extremely useful
to have some information about what kind of casts are we dealing with.
llvm-svn: 375185
In OpenMP constructs all counters are initialized and we should not emit
warnings about uninitialized privatized loop control variables.
llvm-svn: 375167
The goal is to have 100% fidelity in clang-scan-deps behavior when
--analyze is present in compilation command.
At the same time I don't want to break clang-tidy which expects
__static_analyzer__ macro defined as built-in.
I introduce new cc1 options (-setup-static-analyzer) that controls
the macro definition and is conditionally set in driver.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68093
llvm-svn: 374815
CallGraph visited LambdaExpr by getting the Call Operator from
CXXRecordDecl (LambdaExpr::getCallOperator calls
CXXRecordDecl::getLambdaCallOperator), which replaced generic lambda
call operators with the non-instantiated FunctionDecl. The result was
that the CallGraph would only pick up non-dependent calls.
This patch does a few things:
1- Extend CXXRecordDecl to have a getDependentLambdaCallOperator, which
will get the FunctionTemplateDecl, rather than immediately getting the
TemplateDecl.
2- Define getLambdaCallOperator and getDependentLambdaCallOperator in
terms of a common function.
3- Extend LambdaExpr with a getDependentCallOperator, which just calls
the above function.
4- Changes CallGraph to handle Generic LambdaExprs.
llvm-svn: 373247
-Wtautological-overlap-compare and self-comparison from -Wtautological-compare
relay on detecting the same operand in different locations. Previously, each
warning had it's own operand checker. Now, both are merged together into
one function that each can call. The function also now looks through member
access and array accesses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66045
llvm-svn: 372453
Allow this warning to detect a larger number of constant values, including
negative numbers, and handle non-int types better.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66044
llvm-svn: 372448
Summary:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43102
In today's edition of "Is this any better now that it isn't crashing?", I'd like to show you a very interesting test case with loop widening.
Looking at the included test case, it's immediately obvious that this is not only a false positive, but also a very bad bug report in general. We can see how the analyzer mistakenly invalidated `b`, instead of its pointee, resulting in it reporting a null pointer dereference error. Not only that, the point at which this change of value is noted at is at the loop, rather then at the method call.
It turns out that `FindLastStoreVisitor` works correctly, rather the supplied explodedgraph is faulty, because `BlockEdge` really is the `ProgramPoint` where this happens.
{F9855739}
So it's fair to say that this needs improving on multiple fronts. In any case, at least the crash is gone.
Full ExplodedGraph: {F9855743}
Reviewers: NoQ, xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, Charusso, dcoughlin, rnkovacs, TWeaver
Subscribers: JesperAntonsson, uabelho, Ka-Ka, bjope, whisperity, szepet, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, donat.nagy, dkrupp, gamesh411, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66716
llvm-svn: 372269
'-Xclang -triple' doesn't seem to override the default target triple
as reliably as '--target'. This leads to test failing due to
platform-specific checks getting unexpectedly enabled.
llvm-svn: 371781
Short and sweet. Whenever I use -analyzer-list-enabled-checkers, I'm only
interested about the configuration, not about the analysis.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66714
llvm-svn: 371756
This reverts r371497 (git commit 3d7e9ab7b9)
Reorder `not` with `env` in these two tests so they pass:
Driver/rewrite-map-in-diagnostics.c
Index/crash-recovery-modules.m.
This will not be necessary after D66531 lands.
llvm-svn: 371552
I see in the history for some of these tests REQUIRES:shell was used as
a way to disable tests on Windows because they are flaky there. I tried
not to re-enable such tests, but it's possible that I missed some and
this will re-enable flaky tests on Windows. If so, we should disable
them with UNSUPPORTED:system-windows and add a comment that they are
flaky there. So far as I can tell, the lit internal shell is capable of
running all of these tests, and we shouldn't use REQUIRES:shell as a
proxy for Windows.
llvm-svn: 371478
Allow attaching fixit hints to Static Analyzer BugReports.
Fixits are attached either to the bug report itself or to its notes
(path-sensitive event notes or path-insensitive extra notes).
Add support for fixits in text output (including the default text output that
goes without notes, as long as the fixit "belongs" to the warning).
Add support for fixits in the plist output mode.
Implement a fixit for the path-insensitive DeadStores checker. Only dead
initialization warning is currently covered.
Implement a fixit for the path-sensitive VirtualCall checker when the virtual
method is not pure virtual (in this case the "fix" is to suppress the warning
by qualifying the call).
Both fixits are under an off-by-default flag for now, because they
require more careful testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65182
llvm-svn: 371257
Most functions that our checkers react upon are not C-style variadic functions,
and therefore they have as many actual arguments as they have formal parameters.
However, it's not impossible to define a variadic function with the same name.
This will crash any checker that relies on CallDescription to check the number
of arguments but silently assumes that the number of parameters is the same.
Change CallDescription to check both the number of arguments and the number of
parameters by default.
If we're intentionally trying to match variadic functions, allow specifying
arguments and parameters separately (possibly omitting any of them).
For now we only have one CallDescription which would make use of those,
namely __builtin_va_start itself.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67019
llvm-svn: 371256
There are some functions which can't be given a null pointer as parameter either
because it has a nonnull attribute or it is declared to have undefined behavior
(e.g. strcmp()). Sometimes it is hard to determine from the checker message
which parameter is null at the invocation, so now this information is included
in the message.
This commit fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39358
Reviewed By: NoQ, Szelethus, whisperity
Patch by Tibor Brunner!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66333
llvm-svn: 370798
Enables the users to specify an optional flag which would warn for more dead
stores.
Previously it ignored if the dead store happened e.g. in an if condition.
if ((X = generate())) { // dead store to X
}
This patch introduces the `WarnForDeadNestedAssignments` option to the checker,
which is `false` by default - so this change would not affect any previous
users.
I have updated the code, tests and the docs as well. If I missed something, tell
me.
I also ran the analysis on Clang which generated 14 more reports compared to the
unmodified version. All of them seemed reasonable for me.
Related previous patches:
rGf224820b45c6847b91071da8d7ade59f373b96f3
Reviewers: NoQ, krememek, Szelethus, baloghadamsoftware
Reviewed By: Szelethus
Patch by Balázs Benics!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66733
llvm-svn: 370767
initializers.
This has some interesting interactions with our existing extensions to
support C99 designated initializers as an extension in C++. Those are
resolved as follows:
* We continue to permit the full breadth of C99 designated initializers
in C++, with the exception that we disallow a partial overwrite of an
initializer with a non-trivially-destructible type. (Full overwrite
is OK, because we won't run the first initializer at all.)
* The C99 extensions are disallowed in SFINAE contexts and during
overload resolution, where they could change the meaning of valid
programs.
* C++20 disallows reordering of initializers. We only check for that for
the simple cases that the C++20 rules permit (designators of the form
'.field_name =' and continue to allow reordering in other cases).
It would be nice to improve this behavior in future.
* All C99 designated initializer extensions produce a warning by
default in C++20 mode. People are going to learn the C++ rules based
on what Clang diagnoses, so it's important we diagnose these properly
by default.
* In C++ <= 17, we apply the C++20 rules rather than the C99 rules, and
so still diagnose C99 extensions as described above. We continue to
accept designated C++20-compatible initializers in C++ <= 17 silently
by default (but naturally still reject under -pedantic-errors).
This is not a complete implementation of P0329R4. In particular, that
paper introduces new non-C99-compatible syntax { .field { init } }, and
we do not support that yet.
This is based on a previous patch by Don Hinton, though I've made
substantial changes when addressing the above interactions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59754
llvm-svn: 370544
We're building the CFG from bottom to top, so when the return-value expression
has a non-trivial CFG on its own, we need to continue building from the entry
to the return-value expression CFG rather than from the block to which
we've just appended the return statement.
Fixes a false positive warning "control may reach end of non-void function".
llvm-svn: 370406
Range errors (dereferencing or incrementing the past-the-end iterator or
decrementing the iterator of the first element of the range) and access of
invalidated iterators lead to undefined behavior. There is no point to
continue the analysis after such an error on the same execution path, but
terminate it by a sink node (fatal error). This also improves the
performance and helps avoiding double reports (e.g. in case of nested
iterators).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62893
llvm-svn: 370314
Respect C++17 copy elision; previously it would generate destructor calls
for elided temporaries, including in initialization and return statements.
Don't generate duplicate destructor calls for statement expressions.
Fix destructors in initialization lists and comma operators.
Improve printing of implicit destructors.
Patch by Nicholas Allegra!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66404
llvm-svn: 370247
Write tests for the actual crash that was found. Write comments and refactor
code around 17 style bugs and suppress 3 false positives.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66847
llvm-svn: 370246
It was known to be a compile-time constant so it wasn't evaluated during
symbolic execution, but it wasn't evaluated as a compile-time constant either.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66565
llvm-svn: 370245
If the global variable has an initializer, we'll ignore it because we're usually
not analyzing the program from the beginning, which means that the global
variable may have changed before we start our analysis.
However when we're analyzing main() as the top-level function, we can rely
on global initializers to still be valid. At least in C; in C++ we have global
constructors that can still break this logic.
This patch allows the Static Analyzer to load constant initializers from
global variables if the top-level function of the current analysis is main().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65361
llvm-svn: 370244
Summary:
Added basic analysis of map clauses. Only map clauses with to and tofrom
map type must be analyzed since all other map types (alloc, delete, etc.) do not require to use the value of the initial variable, instead they create the new copy of the variable.
Reviewers: NoQ
Subscribers: guansong, cfe-commits, kkwli0, caomhin
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66668
llvm-svn: 370214
According to the SARIF specification, "a text region does not include the character specified by endColumn".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65206
llvm-svn: 370060
There are numorous flaws about the name conflict handling, this patch
attempts fixes them. Changes in details:
* HandleNameConflict return with a false DeclarationName
Hitherto we effectively never returned with a NameConflict error, even
if the preceding StructuralMatch indicated a conflict.
Because we just simply returned with the parameter `Name` in
HandleNameConflict and that name is almost always `true` when converted to
`bool`.
* Add tests which indicate wrong NameConflict handling
* Add to ConflictingDecls only if decl kind is different
Note, we might not indicate an ODR error when there is an existing record decl
and a enum is imported with same name. But there are other cases. E.g. think
about the case when we import a FunctionTemplateDecl with name f and we found a
simple FunctionDecl with name f. They overload. Or in case of a
ClassTemplateDecl and CXXRecordDecl, the CXXRecordDecl could be the 'templated'
class, so it would be false to report error. So I think we should report a
name conflict error only when we are 100% sure of that. That is why I think it
should be a general pattern to report the error only if the kind is the same.
* Fix failing ctu test with EnumConstandDecl
In ctu-main.c we have the enum class 'A' which brings in the enum
constant 'x' with value 0 into the global namespace.
In ctu-other.c we had the enum class 'B' which brought in the same name
('x') as an enum constant but with a different enum value (42). This is clearly
an ODR violation in the global namespace. The solution was to rename the
second enum constant.
* Introduce ODR handling strategies
Reviewers: a_sidorin, shafik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59692
llvm-svn: 370045
Summary: EnumCastOutOfRangeChecker should not perform enum range checks on LValueToRValue casts, since this type of cast does not actually change the underlying type. Performing the unnecessary check actually triggered an assertion failure deeper in EnumCastOutOfRange for certain input (which is captured in the accompanying test code).
Reviewers: #clang, Szelethus, gamesh411, NoQ
Reviewed By: Szelethus, gamesh411, NoQ
Subscribers: NoQ, gamesh411, xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, donat.nagy, dkrupp, Charusso, bjope, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66014
llvm-svn: 369760
Our SVal hierarchy doesn't allow modeling pointer casts as no-op. The
pointer type is instead encoded into the pointer object. Defer to our
usual pointer casting facility, SValBuilder::evalBinOp().
Fixes a crash.
llvm-svn: 369729
This patch concludes my GSoC'19 project by enabling track-conditions by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66381
llvm-svn: 369616
As discussed on the mailing list, notes originating from the tracking of foreach
loop conditions are always meaningless.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66131
llvm-svn: 369613
Summary:
This patch introduces `DynamicCastInfo` similar to `DynamicTypeInfo` which
is stored in `CastSets` which are storing the dynamic cast informations of
objects based on memory regions. It could be used to store and check the
casts and prevent infeasible paths.
Reviewed By: NoQ
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66325
llvm-svn: 369605
In D65724, I do a pretty thorough explanation about how I'm solving this
problem, I think that summary nails whats happening here ;)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65725
llvm-svn: 369596
Exactly what it says on the tin! Note that we're talking about interestingness
in general, hence this isn't a control-dependency-tracking specific patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65724
llvm-svn: 369589
Can't add much more to the title! This is part 1, the case where the collapse
point isn't in the condition point is the responsibility of ConditionBRVisitor,
which I'm addressing in part 2.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65575
llvm-svn: 369574
Add defensive check that prevents a crash when we try to evaluate a destructor
whose this-value is a concrete integer that isn't a null.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65349
llvm-svn: 369450
Calling a pure virtual method during construction or destruction
is undefined behavior. It's worth it to warn about it by default.
That part is now known as the cplusplus.PureVirtualCall checker.
Calling a normal virtual method during construction or destruction
may be fine, but does behave unexpectedly, as it skips virtual dispatch.
Do not warn about this by default, but let projects opt in into it
by enabling the optin.cplusplus.VirtualCall checker manually.
Give the two parts differentiated warning text:
Before:
Call to virtual function during construction or destruction:
Call to pure virtual function during construction
Call to virtual function during construction or destruction:
Call to virtual function during destruction
After:
Pure virtual method call:
Call to pure virtual method 'X::foo' during construction
has undefined behavior
Unexpected loss of virtual dispatch:
Call to virtual method 'Y::bar' during construction
bypasses virtual dispatch
Also fix checker names in consumers that support them (eg., clang-tidy)
because we now have different checker names for pure virtual calls and
regular virtual calls.
Also fix capitalization in the bug category.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64274
llvm-svn: 369449
This patch improves Clang call graph analysis by adding in expressions
that are not found in regular function bodies, such as default arguments
or member initializers.
Patch by Joshua Cranmer!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65453
llvm-svn: 369321
Summary:
Code to import "ctor initializers" at import of functions
is moved to be after the flags in the newly created function
are imported. This fixes an error when the already created but
incomplete (flags are not set) function declaration is accessed.
Reviewers: martong, shafik, a_sidorin, a.sidorin
Reviewed By: shafik
Subscribers: rnkovacs, dkrupp, Szelethus, gamesh411, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65935
llvm-svn: 369098
Summary:
This patch introduces a new `analyzer-config` configuration:
`-analyzer-config silence-checkers`
which could be used to silence the given checkers.
It accepts a semicolon separated list, packed into quotation marks, e.g:
`-analyzer-config silence-checkers="core.DivideZero;core.NullDereference"`
It could be used to "disable" core checkers, so they model the analysis as
before, just if some of them are too noisy it prevents to emit reports.
This patch also adds support for that new option to the scan-build.
Passing the option `-disable-checker core.DivideZero` to the scan-build
will be transferred to `-analyzer-config silence-checkers=core.DivideZero`.
Reviewed By: NoQ, Szelethus
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66042
llvm-svn: 369078
...because we're working with a BugReporterVisitor, and the non-evaluated part
of the condition isn't in the bugpath.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65290
llvm-svn: 368853
Well, what is says on the tin I guess!
Some more changes:
* Move isInevitablySinking() from BugReporter.cpp to CFGBlock's interface
* Rename and move findBlockForNode() from BugReporter.cpp to
ExplodedNode::getCFGBlock()
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65287
llvm-svn: 368836
Summary:
The default expression of a parameter variable should be imported before
the parameter variable object is created. Otherwise the function is created
with an incomplete parameter variable (default argument is nullptr) and in
this intermediary state the expression is imported. This import can have
a reference to the incomplete parameter variable that causes crash.
Reviewers: martong, a.sidorin, shafik
Reviewed By: martong
Subscribers: rnkovacs, dkrupp, Szelethus, gamesh411, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65577
llvm-svn: 368818
Exactly what it says on the tin! The comments in the code detail this a
little more too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64272
llvm-svn: 368817
Summary:
The following code snippet taken from D64271#1572188 has an issue: namely,
because `flag`'s value isn't undef or a concrete int, it isn't being tracked.
int flag;
bool coin();
void foo() {
flag = coin();
}
void test() {
int *x = 0;
int local_flag;
flag = 1;
foo();
local_flag = flag;
if (local_flag)
x = new int;
foo();
local_flag = flag;
if (local_flag)
*x = 5;
}
This, in my opinion, makes no sense, other values may be interesting too.
Originally added by rC185608.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64287
llvm-svn: 368773
During the evaluation of D62883, I noticed a bunch of totally
meaningless notes with the pattern of "Calling 'A'" -> "Returning value"
-> "Returning from 'A'", which added no value to the report at all.
This patch (not only affecting tracked conditions mind you) prunes
diagnostic messages to functions that return a value not constrained to
be 0, and are also linear.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64232
llvm-svn: 368771
They're useful when trying to understand what's going on
inside your LazyCompoundValues.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65427
llvm-svn: 368769
When -trim-egraph is unavailable (say, when you're debugging a crash on
a real-world code that takes too long to reduce), it makes sense to view
the untrimmed graph up to the crashing node's predecessor, then dump the ID
(or a pointer) of the node in the attached debugger, and then trim
the dumped graph in order to keep only paths from the root to the node.
The newly added --to flag does exactly that:
$ exploded-graph-rewriter.py ExprEngine.dot --to 0x12229acd0
Multiple nodes can be specified. Stable IDs of nodes can be used
instead of pointers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65345
llvm-svn: 368768
Explorers aren't the right abstraction. For the purposes of displaying svg files
we don't care in which order do we explore the nodes. We may care about this for
other analyses, but we're not there yet.
The function of cutting out chunks of the graph is performed poorly by
the explorers, because querying predecessors/successors on the explored nodes
yields original successors/predecessors even if they aren't being explored.
Introduce a new entity, "trimmers", that do one thing but to it right: cut out
chunks of the graph. Trimmers mutate the graph, so stale edges aren't even
visible to their consumers in the pipeline. Additionally, trimmers are
intrinsically composable: multiple trimmers can be applied to the graph
sequentially.
Refactor the single-path explorer into the single-path trimmer.
Rename the test file for consistency.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65344
llvm-svn: 368767
Change the default behavior: the tool no longer dumps the rewritten .dot file
to stdout, but instead it automatically converts it into an .html file
(which essentially wraps an .svg file) and immediately opens it with
the default web browser.
This means that the tool should now be fairly easy to use:
$ exploded-graph-rewriter.py /tmp/ExprEngine.dot
The benefits of wrapping the .svg file into an .html file are:
- It'll open in a web browser, which is the intended behavior.
An .svg file would be open with an image viewer/editor instead.
- It avoids the white background around the otherwise dark svg area
in dark mode.
The feature can be turned off by passing a flag '--rewrite-only'.
The LIT substitution is updated to enforce the old mode because
we don't want web browsers opening on our buildbots.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65250
llvm-svn: 368766
Summary:
A condition could be a multi-line expression where we create the highlight
in separated chunks. PathDiagnosticPopUpPiece is not made for that purpose,
it cannot be added to multiple lines because we have only one ending part
which contains all the notes. So that it cannot have multiple endings and
therefore this patch narrows down the ranges of the highlight to the given
interesting variable of the condition. It prevents HTML-breaking injections.
Reviewed By: NoQ
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65663
llvm-svn: 368382
Summary:
Added support for basic analysis of the linear variables and linear step
expression. Linear loop iteration variables must be excluded from this
analysis, only non-loop iteration variables must be analyzed.
Reviewers: NoQ
Subscribers: guansong, cfe-commits, caomhin, kkwli0
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65461
llvm-svn: 368295
Summary:
When searching for a declaration to be loaded the "lookup name" for every
other Decl is computed. If the USR can not be determined here should be
not an assert, instead skip this Decl.
Reviewers: martong
Reviewed By: martong
Subscribers: rnkovacs, dkrupp, Szelethus, gamesh411, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65445
llvm-svn: 368020
Summary:
It allows discriminating between stack frames of the same call that is
called multiple times in a loop.
Thanks to Artem Dergachev for the great idea!
Reviewed By: NoQ
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65587
llvm-svn: 367608
clang/test/lit.cfg.py doesn't list .cc as test extension, so these
tests never ran.
Tweak one of the two tests to actually pass, now that it runs.
(The other one was already passing.)
llvm-svn: 367574
If we detect a built-in declaration for which we cannot derive a type
matching the pattern in the Builtins.def file, we currently emit a
warning that the respective header is needed. However, this is not
necessarily the behavior we want as it has no connection to the location
of the declaration (which can actually be in the header in question).
Instead, this warning is generated
- if we could not build the type for the pattern on file (for some
reason). Here we should make the reason explicit. The actual problem
is otherwise circumvented as the warning is misleading, see [0] for
an example.
- if we could not build the type for the pattern because we do not
have a type on record, possible since D55483, we should not emit any
warning. See [1] for a legitimate problem.
This patch address both cases. For the "setjmp" family a new warning is
introduced and for built-ins without type on record, so far
"pthread_create", we do not emit the warning anymore.
Also see: PR40692
[0] https://lkml.org/lkml/2019/1/11/718
[1] https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=235583
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58091
llvm-svn: 367387
While we implemented taint propagation rules for several
builtin/standard functions, there's a natural desire for users to add
such rules to custom functions.
A series of patches will implement an option that allows users to
annotate their functions with taint propagation rules through a YAML
file. This one adds parsing of the configuration file, which may be
specified in the commands line with the analyzer config:
alpha.security.taint.TaintPropagation:Config. The configuration may
contain propagation rules, filter functions (remove taint) and sink
functions (give a warning if it gets a tainted value).
I also added a new header for future checkers to conveniently read YAML
files as checker options.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59555
llvm-svn: 367190
Summary:
Reduction variables are the variables, for which the private copies
must be created in the OpenMP regions. Then they are initialized with
the predefined values depending on the reduction operation. After exit
from the OpenMP region the original variable is updated using the
reduction value and the value of the original reduction variable.
Reviewers: NoQ
Subscribers: guansong, jdoerfert, caomhin, kkwli0, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65106
llvm-svn: 367116
Summary:
When cross TU analysis is used it is possible that a macro expansion
is generated for a macro that is defined (and used) in other than
the main translation unit. To get the expansion for it the source
location in the original source file and original preprocessor
is needed.
Reviewers: martong, xazax.hun, Szelethus, ilya-biryukov
Reviewed By: Szelethus
Subscribers: mgorny, NoQ, ilya-biryukov, rnkovacs, dkrupp, Szelethus, gamesh411, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64638
llvm-svn: 367006
Summary:
Firstprivate variables are the variables, for which the private copies
must be created in the OpenMP regions and must be initialized with the
original values. Thus, we must report if the uninitialized variable is
used as firstprivate.
Reviewers: NoQ
Subscribers: guansong, jdoerfert, caomhin, kkwli0, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64765
llvm-svn: 366689
Summary:
Integer Set Library using retain-count based allocation which is not
modeled in MallocChecker.
Reviewed By: NoQ
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64680
llvm-svn: 366391
Summary:
Added support for analysis of if clauses in the OpenMP directives to be
able to check for the use of uninitialized variables.
Reviewers: NoQ
Subscribers: guansong, jfb, jdoerfert, caomhin, kkwli0, cfe-commits
Tags: clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64646
llvm-svn: 366211
Summary:
Added support for analysis of if clauses in the OpenMP directives to be
able to check for the use of uninitialized variables.
Reviewers: NoQ
Subscribers: guansong, jfb, jdoerfert, caomhin, kkwli0, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64646
llvm-svn: 366068
- Correctly display macro expansion and spelling locations.
- Use the same procedure to display location context call site locations.
- Display statement IDs for program points.
llvm-svn: 365861
Summary:
Some OpenMP clauses rely on the values of the variables. If the variable
is not initialized and used in OpenMP clauses that depend on the
variables values, it should be reported that the uninitialized variable
is used in the OpenMP clause expression.
This patch adds initial processing for uninitialized variables in OpenMP
constructs. Currently, it checks for use of the uninitialized variables
in the structured blocks.
Reviewers: NoQ, Szelethus, dcoughlin, xazax.hun, a.sidorin, george.karpenkov, szepet
Subscribers: rnkovacs, guansong, jfb, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64356
llvm-svn: 365786
Summary:
It models the LLVM casts:
- `cast<>`
- `dyn_cast<>`
- `cast_or_null<>`
- `dyn_cast_or_null<>`
It has a very basic support without checking the `classof()` function.
(It reapplies the reverted 'llvm-svn: 365582' patch with proper test file.)
Reviewed By: NoQ
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64374
llvm-svn: 365585
Summary:
It models the LLVM casts:
- `cast<>`
- `dyn_cast<>`
- `cast_or_null<>`
- `dyn_cast_or_null<>`
It has a very basic support without checking the `classof()` function.
Reviewed By: NoQ
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64374
llvm-svn: 365582
In this mode the rewriter will only rewrite program points
and omit program states. Useful for understanding
the rough topology of the graph.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64264
llvm-svn: 365410
Instead of rewriting the whole graph, rewrite the leftmost path in the
graph. Useful for trimmed graphs that are still too large to display due
to multiple equivalent reports mixed into them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64263
llvm-svn: 365409
Summary:
During CTU analysis of complex projects, the loaded AST-contents of
imported TUs can grow bigger than available system memory. This option
introduces a threshold on the number of TUs to be imported for a single
TU in order to prevent such cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59798
llvm-svn: 365314
This patch is a major part of my GSoC project, aimed to improve the bug
reports of the analyzer.
TL;DR: Help the analyzer understand that some conditions are important,
and should be explained better. If an CFGBlock is a control dependency
of a block where an expression value is tracked, explain the condition
expression better by tracking it.
if (A) // let's explain why we believe A to be true
10 / x; // division by zero
This is an experimental feature, and can be enabled by the
off-by-default analyzer configuration "track-conditions".
In detail:
This idea was inspired by the program slicing algorithm. Essentially,
two things are used to produce a program slice (a subset of the program
relevant to a (statement, variable) pair): data and control
dependencies. The bug path (the linear path in the ExplodedGraph that leads
from the beginning of the analysis to the error node) enables to
analyzer to argue about data dependencies with relative ease.
Control dependencies are a different slice of the cake entirely.
Just because we reached a branch during symbolic execution, it
doesn't mean that that particular branch has any effect on whether the
bug would've occured. This means that we can't simply rely on the bug
path to gather control dependencies.
In previous patches, LLVM's IDFCalculator, which works on a control flow
graph rather than the ExplodedGraph was generalized to solve this issue.
We use this information to heuristically guess that the value of a tracked
expression depends greatly on it's control dependencies, and start
tracking them as well.
After plenty of evaluations this was seen as great idea, but still
lacking refinements (we should have different descriptions about a
conditions value), hence it's off-by-default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62883
llvm-svn: 365207
I intend to improve the analyzer's bug reports by tracking condition
expressions.
01 bool b = messyComputation();
02 int i = 0;
03 if (b) // control dependency of the bug site, let's explain why we assume val
04 // to be true
05 10 / i; // warn: division by zero
I'll detail this heuristic in the followup patch, strictly related to this one
however:
* Create the new ControlDependencyCalculator class that uses llvm::IDFCalculator
to (lazily) calculate control dependencies for Clang's CFG.
* A new debug checker debug.DumpControlDependencies is added for lit tests
* Add unittests
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62619
llvm-svn: 365197
Transform clang::DominatorTree to be able to also calculate post dominators.
* Tidy up the documentation
* Make it clang::DominatorTree template class (similarly to how
llvm::DominatorTreeBase works), rename it to clang::CFGDominatorTreeImpl
* Clang's dominator tree is now called clang::CFGDomTree
* Clang's brand new post dominator tree is called clang::CFGPostDomTree
* Add a lot of asserts to the dump() function
* Create a new checker to test the functionality
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62551
llvm-svn: 365028
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42041
In Clang's CFG, we use nullpointers to represent unreachable nodes, for
example, in the included testfile, block B0 is unreachable from block
B1, resulting in a nullpointer dereference somewhere in
llvm::DominatorTreeBase<clang::CFGBlock, false>::recalculate.
This patch fixes this issue by specializing
llvm::DomTreeBuilder::SemiNCAInfo::ChildrenGetter::Get for
clang::CFG to not contain nullpointer successors.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62507
llvm-svn: 365026
Add a label to nodes that have a bug report attached or on which
the analysis was generally interrupted.
Fix printing has_report and implement printing is_sink in the graph dumper.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64110
llvm-svn: 364992
When printing various statements that include braces (compound
statements, lambda expressions, statement-expressions, etc.),
replace the code between braces with '...'.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64104
llvm-svn: 364990
Due to RVO the target region of a function that returns an object by
value isn't necessarily a temporary object region; it may be an
arbitrary memory region. In particular, it may be a field of a bigger
object.
Make sure we don't invalidate the bigger object when said function is
evaluated conservatively.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63968
llvm-svn: 364870
The NonnullGlobalConstants checker models the rule "it doesn't make sense
to make a constant global pointer and initialize it to null"; it makes sure
that whatever it's initialized with is known to be non-null.
Ironically, annotating the type of the pointer as _Nonnull breaks the checker.
Fix handling of the _Nonnull annotation so that it was instead one more reason
to believe that the value is non-null.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63956
llvm-svn: 364869
This patch uses the new CDF_MaybeBuiltin flag to handle C library functions.
It's mostly an NFC/refactoring pass, but it does fix a bug in handling memset()
when it expands to __builtin___memset_chk() because the latter has
one more argument and memset() handling code was trying to match
the exact number of arguments. Now the code is deduplicated and there's
less room for mistakes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62557
llvm-svn: 364868
Slightly cleanup emission of horizontal lines and unhardcode the title
for generic maps.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64041
llvm-svn: 364865
Diff support included.
A cheap solution is implemented that treats range constraints as
"some sort of key-value map", so it's going to be trivial
to add support for other such maps later, such as dynamic type info.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63685
llvm-svn: 364268
Summary:
After evaluation it would be an Unknown value and tracking would be lost.
Reviewers: NoQ, xazax.hun, ravikandhadai, baloghadamsoftware, Szelethus
Reviewed By: NoQ
Subscribers: szepet, rnkovacs, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, donat.nagy,
dkrupp, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63720
llvm-svn: 364259
Summary: Now we also print out the filename with its path.
Reviewers: NoQ
Reviewed By: NoQ
Subscribers: xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin,
mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63438
llvm-svn: 364197
Summary:
- Now we could see the `has_report` property in `trim-egraph` mode.
- This patch also removes the trailing comma after each node.
Reviewers: NoQ
Reviewed By: NoQ
Subscribers: xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin,
mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63436
llvm-svn: 364193
In this mode the tool would avoid duplicating the contents of the
program state on every node, replacing them with a diff-like dump
of changes that happened on that node.
This is useful because most of the time we only interested in whether
the effect of the statement was modeled correctly. A diffed graph would
also be much faster to load and navigate, being much smaller than
the original graph.
The diffs are computed "semantically" as opposed to plain text diffs.
I.e., the diff algorithm is hand-crafted separately for every state trait,
taking the underlying data structures into account. This is especially nice
for Environment because textual diffs would have been terrible.
On the other hand, it requires some boilerplate to implement.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62761
llvm-svn: 363898
Quotes around StringRegions are now escaped and unescaped correctly,
producing valid JSON.
Additionally, add a forgotten escape for Store values.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63519
llvm-svn: 363897
Include a unique pointer so that it was possible to figure out if it's
the same cluster in different program states. This allows comparing
dumps of different states against each other.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63362
llvm-svn: 363896
Location context ID is a property of the location context, not of an item
within it. It's useful to know the id even when there are no items
in the context, eg. for the purposes of figuring out how did contents
of the Environment for the same location context changed across states.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62754
llvm-svn: 363895
IIG is a replacement for MIG in DriverKit: IIG is autogenerating C++ code.
Suppress dead store warnings on such code, as the tool seems to be producing
them regularly, and the users of IIG are not in position to address these
warnings, as they don't control the autogenerated code. IIG-generated code
is identified by looking at the comments at the top of the file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63118
llvm-svn: 363892
It's a new API for custom RTTI in Apple IOKit/DriverKit framework that is
similar to OSDynamicCast() that's already supported, but crashes instead of
returning null (and therefore causing UB when the cast fails unexpectedly).
Kind of like cast_or_null<> as opposed to dyn_cast_or_null<> in LLVM's RTTI.
Historically, RetainCountChecker was responsible for modeling OSDynamicCast.
This is simply an extension of the same functionality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63117
llvm-svn: 363891
Summary:
This patch applies a change similar to rC363069, but for SARIF files.
The `%diff_sarif` lit substitution invokes `diff` with a non-portable
`-I` option. The intended effect can be achieved by normalizing the
inputs to `diff` beforehand. Such normalization can be done with
`grep -Ev`, which is also used by other tests.
Additionally, this patch updates the SARIF output to have a newline at
the end of the file. This makes it so that the SARIF file qualifies as a
POSIX text file, which increases the consumability of the generated file
in relation to various tools.
Reviewers: NoQ, sfertile, xingxue, jasonliu, daltenty, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, Charusso, jsji, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62952
llvm-svn: 363822
As discussed in the review for D62952, this patch pre-normalizes the
reference expected output sarif files by removing lines containing
fields for which we expect differences that should be ignored.
llvm-svn: 363788
Often times, when an ArraySubscriptExpr was reported as null or
undefined, the bug report was difficult to understand, because the
analyzer explained why arr[i] has that value, but didn't realize that in
fact i's value is very important as well. This patch fixes this by
tracking the indices of arrays.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63080
llvm-svn: 363510
Summary:
When we traversed backwards on ExplodedNodes to see where processed the
given statement we `break` too early. With the current approach we do not
miss the CallExitEnd ProgramPoint which stands for an inlined call.
Reviewers: NoQ, xazax.hun, ravikandhadai, baloghadamsoftware, Szelethus
Reviewed By: NoQ
Subscribers: szepet, rnkovacs, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, donat.nagy,
dkrupp, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62926
llvm-svn: 363491
nullptr_t does not access memory.
We now reuse CK_NullToPointer to represent a conversion from a glvalue
of type nullptr_t to a prvalue of nullptr_t where necessary.
This reinstates r363337, reverted in r363352.
llvm-svn: 363429
Revert 363340 "Remove unused SK_LValueToRValue initialization step."
Revert 363337 "PR23833, DR2140: an lvalue-to-rvalue conversion on a glvalue of type"
Revert 363295 "C++ DR712 and others: handle non-odr-use resulting from an lvalue-to-rvalue conversion applied to a member access or similar not-quite-trivial lvalue expression."
llvm-svn: 363352
nullptr_t does not access memory.
We now reuse CK_NullToPointer to represent a conversion from a glvalue
of type nullptr_t to a prvalue of nullptr_t where necessary.
This reinstates r345562, reverted in r346065, now that CodeGen's
handling of non-odr-used variables has been fixed.
llvm-svn: 363337
Following r363007, which reverted r362998, r362996, and r362994,
reapply with adjustments for the CRLF differences encountered with
Windows. Namely, the `-b` option of `diff` is employed, and the `grep`
patterns have `$` replaced with `[[:space:]]*$`.
llvm-svn: 363069
Reverts r362998, r362996, and r362994 because the tests do not pass on
Windows due to CRLF changes. Adding back `-w` to diff is not enough, the
new grep substitution doesn't work on Windows, and fixing it is
non-trivial.
llvm-svn: 363007
Summary:
The `%diff_plist` lit substitution invokes `diff` with a non-portable
`-I` option. The intended effect can be achieved by normalizing the
inputs to `diff` beforehand. Such normalization can be done with
`grep -Ev`, which is also used by other tests.
This patch applies the change (adjusted for review comments) described
in http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-April/061904.html
mechanically to the cases where the output file is piped to
`%diff_plist` via `tail`. `%diff_plist` is then, being unused, removed.
The changes were applied via a script.
Reviewers: NoQ, sfertile, xingxue, jasonliu, daltenty
Subscribers: xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, Charusso, jsji, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62951
llvm-svn: 362998
Summary:
The `%diff_plist` lit substitution invokes `diff` with a non-portable
`-I` option. The intended effect can be achieved by normalizing the
inputs to `diff` beforehand. Such normalization can be done with
`grep -Ev`, which is also used by other tests.
This patch applies the change (adjusted for review comments) described
in http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-April/061904.html
mechanically to the cases where the output file is piped to
`%diff_plist` via `cat`.
The changes were applied via a script, except that
`clang/test/Analysis/NewDelete-path-notes.cpp` and
`clang/test/Analysis/plist-macros-with-expansion.cpp` were each adjusted
for the line-continuation on the relevant `RUN` step.
Reviewers: NoQ, sfertile, xingxue, jasonliu, daltenty
Subscribers: xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, Charusso, jsji, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62950
llvm-svn: 362996
Summary:
The `%diff_plist` lit substitution invokes `diff` with a non-portable
`-I` option. The intended effect can be achieved by normalizing the
inputs to `diff` beforehand. Such normalization can be done with
`grep -Ev`, which is also used by other tests.
This patch applies the change (adjusted for review comments) described
in http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-April/061904.html to the
specific case shown in the list message. Mechanical changes to the other
affected files will follow in later patches.
Reviewers: NoQ, sfertile, xingxue, jasonliu, daltenty
Reviewed By: NoQ
Subscribers: xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, Charusso, jsji, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62949
llvm-svn: 362994
As suggested in the review for D62949, this patch pre-normalizes the
reference expected output plist files by removing lines containing
fields for which we expect differences that should be ignored.
llvm-svn: 362877
Summary:
We're using the clang static analyzer together with a number of
custom analyses in our CI system to ensure that certain invariants
are statiesfied for by the code every commit. Unfortunately, there
currently doesn't seem to be a good way to determine whether any
analyzer warnings were emitted, other than parsing clang's output
(or using scan-build, which then in turn parses clang's output).
As a simpler mechanism, simply add a `-analyzer-werror` flag to CC1
that causes the analyzer to emit its warnings as errors instead.
I briefly tried to have this be `Werror=analyzer` and make it go
through that machinery instead, but that seemed more trouble than
it was worth in terms of conflicting with options to the actual build
and special cases that would be required to circumvent the analyzers
usual attempts to quiet non-analyzer warnings. This is simple and it
works well.
Reviewed-By: NoQ, Szelethusw
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62885
llvm-svn: 362855
This is a utility to improve readability and generally manipulate
GraphViz dumps of the analysis graph. Such dumps are often huge and
not only hard to read, but also often hang the viewer apps with their
mere size. Such script should significantly improve debugging experience.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62638
llvm-svn: 362340
Recommit of r361790 that was temporarily reverted in r361793 due to bot breakage.
Summary:
The following changes were required to fix these tests:
1) Change LLVM_ENABLE_PLUGINS to an option and move it to
llvm/CMakeLists.txt with an appropriate default -- which matches
the original default behavior.
2) Move the plugins directory from clang/test/Analysis
clang/lib/Analysis. It's not enough to add an exclude to the
lit.local.cfg file because add_lit_testsuites recurses the tree and
automatically adds the appropriate `check-` targets, which don't
make sense for the plugins because they aren't tests and don't
have `RUN` statements.
Here's a list of the `clang-check-anlysis*` targets with this
change:
```
$ ninja -t targets all| sed -n "s/.*\/\(check[^:]*\):.*/\1/p" | sort -u | grep clang-analysis
check-clang-analysis
check-clang-analysis-checkers
check-clang-analysis-copypaste
check-clang-analysis-diagnostics
check-clang-analysis-engine
check-clang-analysis-exploration_order
check-clang-analysis-html_diagnostics
check-clang-analysis-html_diagnostics-relevant_lines
check-clang-analysis-inlining
check-clang-analysis-objc
check-clang-analysis-unified-sources
check-clang-analysis-z3
```
3) Simplify the logic and only include the subdirectories under
clang/lib/Analysis/plugins if LLVM_ENABLE_PLUGINS is set.
Reviewed By: NoQ
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62445
llvm-svn: 362328
function scope.
This removes one of the last few cases where we build expressions in the
wrong function scope context. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 362178
Summary:
Printing out a map structure different in different environments so that
this patch generalize the test-case to check for the 'no stmt'-case
anywhere in the Store.
llvm-svn: 362098
Syntax:
asm [volatile] goto ( AssemblerTemplate
:
: InputOperands
: Clobbers
: GotoLabels)
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Extended-Asm.html
New llvm IR is "callbr" for inline asm goto instead "call" for inline asm
For:
asm goto("testl %0, %0; jne %l1;" :: "r"(cond)::label_true, loop);
IR:
callbr void asm sideeffect "testl $0, $0; jne ${1:l};", "r,X,X,~{dirflag},~{fpsr},~{flags}"(i32 %0, i8* blockaddress(@foo, %label_true), i8* blockaddress(@foo, %loop)) #1
to label %asm.fallthrough [label %label_true, label %loop], !srcloc !3
asm.fallthrough:
Compiler need to generate:
1> a dummy constarint 'X' for each label.
2> an unique fallthrough label for each asm goto stmt " asm.fallthrough%number".
Diagnostic
1> duplicate asm operand name are used in output, input and label.
2> goto out of scope.
llvm-svn: 362045
Summary:
This new piece is similar to our macro expansion printing in HTML reports:
On mouse-hover event it pops up on variables. Similar to note pieces it
supports `plist` diagnostics as well.
It is optional, on by default: `add-pop-up-notes=true`.
Extra: In HTML reports `background-color: LemonChiffon` was too light,
changed to `PaleGoldenRod`.
Reviewers: NoQ, alexfh
Reviewed By: NoQ
Subscribers: cfe-commits, gerazo, gsd, george.karpenkov, alexfh, xazax.hun,
baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho,
Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60670
llvm-svn: 362014
Summary:
The following changes were required to fix these tests:
1) Change LLVM_ENABLE_PLUGINS to an option and move it to
llvm/CMakeLists.txt with an appropriate default -- which matches
the original default behavior.
2) Move the plugins directory from clang/test/Analysis
clang/lib/Analysis. It's not enough to add an exclude to the
lit.local.cfg file because add_lit_testsuites recurses the tree and
automatically adds the appropriate `check-` targets, which don't
make sense for the plugins because they aren't tests and don't
have `RUN` statements.
Here's a list of the `clang-check-anlysis*` targets with this
change:
```
$ ninja -t targets all| sed -n "s/.*\/\(check[^:]*\):.*/\1/p" | sort -u | grep clang-analysis
check-clang-analysis
check-clang-analysis-checkers
check-clang-analysis-copypaste
check-clang-analysis-diagnostics
check-clang-analysis-engine
check-clang-analysis-exploration_order
check-clang-analysis-html_diagnostics
check-clang-analysis-html_diagnostics-relevant_lines
check-clang-analysis-inlining
check-clang-analysis-objc
check-clang-analysis-unified-sources
check-clang-analysis-z3
```
3) Simplify the logic and only include the subdirectories under
clang/lib/Analysis/plugins if LLVM_ENABLE_PLUGINS is set.
Reviewed By: NoQ
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62445
llvm-svn: 361790
This reverts commit r361340. The following builder has been broken for
the past few days because of this commit:
http://green.lab.llvm.org/green/job/clang-stage2-cmake-RgSan/
Also revert r361399, which was committed to fix r361340.
llvm-svn: 361685
When initialization of virtual base classes is skipped, we now tell the user
about it, because this aspect of C++ isn't very well-known.
The implementation is based on the new "note tags" feature (r358781).
In order to make use of it, allow note tags to produce prunable notes,
and move the note tag factory to CoreEngine.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61817
llvm-svn: 361682
This patch adds the run-time CFG branch that would skip initialization of
virtual base classes depending on whether the constructor is called from a
superclass constructor or not. Previously the Static Analyzer was already
skipping virtual base-class initializers in such constructors, but it wasn't
skipping their arguments and their potential side effects, which was causing
pr41300 (and was generally incorrect). The previous skipping behavior is
now replaced with a hard assertion that we're not even getting there due
to how our CFG works.
The new CFG element is under a CFG build option so that not to break other
consumers of the CFG by this change. Static Analyzer support for this change
is implemented.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61816
llvm-svn: 361681
Move FileCheck directives around so that it was easy to understand
what tests what and what effect do changes have.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61815
llvm-svn: 361587
Same patch as D62093, but for checker/plugin options, the only
difference being that options for alpha checkers are implicitly marked
as alpha.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62093
llvm-svn: 361566
These options are now only visible under
-analyzer-checker-option-help-developer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61839
llvm-svn: 361561
Previously, the only way to display the list of available checkers was
to invoke the analyzer with -analyzer-checker-help frontend flag. This
however wasn't really great from a maintainer standpoint: users came
across checkers meant strictly for development purposes that weren't to
be tinkered with, or those that were still in development. This patch
creates a clearer division in between these categories.
From now on, we'll have 3 flags to display the list checkers. These
lists are mutually exclusive and can be used in any combination (for
example to display both stable and alpha checkers).
-analyzer-checker-help: Displays the list for stable, production ready
checkers.
-analyzer-checker-help-alpha: Displays the list for in development
checkers. Enabling is discouraged
for non-development purposes.
-analyzer-checker-help-developer: Modeling and debug checkers. Modeling
checkers shouldn't be enabled/disabled
by hand, and debug checkers shouldn't
be touched by users.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62093
llvm-svn: 361558
Add the new frontend flag -analyzer-checker-option-help to display all
checker/package options.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57858
llvm-svn: 361552
These are needed to avoid undefined symbols which aren't satisfied
by Clang itself.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62174
llvm-svn: 361340
Since D57922, the config table contains every checker option, and it's default
value, so having it as an argument for getChecker*Option is redundant.
By the time any of the getChecker*Option function is called, we verified the
value in CheckerRegistry (after D57860), so we can confidently assert here, as
any irregularities detected at this point must be a programmer error. However,
in compatibility mode, verification won't happen, so the default value must be
restored.
This implies something else, other than adding removing one more potential point
of failure -- debug.ConfigDumper will always contain valid values for
checker/package options!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59195
llvm-svn: 361042
Validate whether the option exists, and also whether the supplied value is of
the correct type. With this patch, invoking the analyzer should be, at least
in the frontend mode, a lot safer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57860
llvm-svn: 361011
The more entries we have in AnalyzerOptions::ConfigTable, the more helpful
debug.ConfigDumper is. With this patch, I'm pretty confident that it'll now emit
the entire state of the analyzer, minus the frontend flags.
It would be nice to reserve the config table specifically to checker options
only, as storing the regular analyzer configs is kinda redundant.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57922
llvm-svn: 361006
When plugins aren't enabled, don't try to run plugins tests. Don't
enable plugins unconditionally based on the platform, instead check
if LLVM shared library is actually being built which may not be the
case for every host configuration, even if the host itself supports
plugins.
This addresses test failures introduced by r360891/D59464.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62050
llvm-svn: 360991
Buildbots complained that they couldn't find the newly added plugins.
The solution was to move the check-clang cmake target closer to the bottom of
the file, after the new dependencies are added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59464
llvm-svn: 360891
Also, I moved the existing analyzer plugin to test/ as well, in order not to
give the illusion that the analyzer supports plugins -- it's capable of handling
them, but does not _support_ them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59464
llvm-svn: 360799
The checker was crashing when it was trying to assume a structure
to be null or non-null so that to evaluate the effect of the annotation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61958
llvm-svn: 360790
Suppress MIG checker false positives that occur when the programmer increments
the reference count before calling a MIG destructor, and the MIG destructor
literally boils down to decrementing the reference count.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61925
llvm-svn: 360737
When looking for the location context of the call site, unwrap block invocation
contexts because they are attached to the current AnalysisDeclContext
while what we need is the previous AnalysisDeclContext.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61545
llvm-svn: 360202
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41741
Pretty much the same as D61246 and D61106, this time for __complex__ types. Upon
further investigation, I realized that we should regard all types
Type::isScalarType returns true for as primitive, so I merged
isMemberPointerType(), isBlockPointerType() and isAnyComplexType()` into that
instead.
I also stumbled across yet another bug,
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41753, but it seems to be unrelated to
this checker.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61569
llvm-svn: 359998
During my work on analyzer dependencies, I created a great amount of new
checkers that emitted no diagnostics at all, and were purely modeling some
function or another.
However, the user shouldn't really disable/enable these by hand, hence this
patch, which hides these by default. I intentionally chose not to hide alpha
checkers, because they have a scary enough name, in my opinion, to cause no
surprise when they emit false positives or cause crashes.
The patch introduces the Hidden bit into the TableGen files (you may remember
it before I removed it in D53995), and checkers that are either marked as
hidden, or are in a package that is marked hidden won't be displayed under
-analyzer-checker-help. -analyzer-checker-help-hidden, a new flag meant for
developers only, displays the full list.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60925
llvm-svn: 359720
Reference expected files not ending with a newline are normalized to
have said newlines. Additionally `plist-macros-with-expansion.cpp.plist`
is modified to add a line that is ignored by `%diff_plist`, but not by
the more sensitive pattern proposed by
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-April/061904.html for
`%normalize_plist`.
llvm-svn: 359692
For various files under `clang/test/Analysis`, D52036 applied
`%diff_plist` to replace `diff` invocations with certain options and
D56340 swapped the order of the arguments so that the reference file
comes first. The tests that used `tail` to filter the test output were
not modified accordingly. This patch applies the corresponding update
to those tests.
llvm-svn: 359691
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41611
Similarly to D61106, the checker ran over an llvm_unreachable for vector types:
struct VectorSizeLong {
VectorSizeLong() {}
__attribute__((__vector_size__(16))) long x;
};
void __vector_size__LongTest() {
VectorSizeLong v;
}
Since, according to my short research,
"The vector_size attribute is only applicable to integral and float scalars,
although arrays, pointers, and function return values are allowed in conjunction
with this construct."
[src: https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.6.1/gcc/Vector-Extensions.html#Vector-Extensions]
vector types are safe to regard as primitive.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61246
llvm-svn: 359539
Currently we always inline functions that have no branches, i.e. have exactly
three CFG blocks: ENTRY, some code, EXIT. This makes sense because when there
are no branches, it means that there's no exponential complexity introduced
by inlining such function. Such functions also don't trigger various fundamental
problems with our inlining mechanism, such as the problem of inlined
defensive checks.
Sometimes the CFG may contain more blocks, but in practice it still has
linear structure because all directions (except, at most, one) of all branches
turned out to be unreachable. When this happens, still treat the function
as "small". This is useful, in particular, for dealing with C++17 if constexpr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61051
llvm-svn: 359531
Don't crash when trying to model a call in which the callee is unknown
in compile time, eg. a pointer-to-member call.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61285
llvm-svn: 359530
In the OSObject universe there appears to be another slightly popular contract,
apart from "create" and "get", which is "matching". It optionally consumes
a "table" parameter and if a table is passed, it fills in the table and
returns it at +0; otherwise, it creates a new table, fills it in and
returns it at +1.
For now suppress false positives by doing a conservative escape on all functions
that end with "Matching", which is the naming convention that seems to be
followed by all such methods.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61161
llvm-svn: 359264
Because RetainCountChecker has custom "local" reasoning about escapes,
it has a separate facility to deal with tracked symbols at end of analysis
and check them for leaks regardless of whether they're dead or not.
This facility iterates over the list of tracked symbols and reports
them as leaks, but it needs to treat the return value specially.
Some custom allocators tend to return the value with an offset, storing
extra metadata at the beginning of the buffer. In this case the return value
would be a non-base region. In order to avoid false positives, we still need to
find the original symbol within the return value, otherwise it'll be unable
to match it to the item in the list of tracked symbols.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60991
llvm-svn: 359263
the assertion is in fact incorrect: there is a cornercase in Objective-C++
in which a C++ object is not constructed with a constructor, but merely
zero-initialized. Namely, this happens when an Objective-C message is sent
to a nil and it is supposed to return a C++ object.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60988
llvm-svn: 359262
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41590
For the following code snippet, UninitializedObjectChecker crashed:
struct MyAtomicInt {
_Atomic(int) x;
MyAtomicInt() {}
};
void entry() {
MyAtomicInt b;
}
The problem was that _Atomic types were not regular records, unions,
dereferencable or primitive, making the checker hit the llvm_unreachable at
lib/StaticAnalyzer/Checkers/UninitializedObject/UninitializedObjectChecker.cpp:347.
The solution is to regard these types as primitive as well. The test case shows
that with this addition, not only are we able to get rid of the crash, but we
can identify x as uninitialized.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61106
llvm-svn: 359230
If macro "CHECK_X(x)" expands to something like "if (x != NULL) ...",
the "Assuming..." note no longer says "Assuming 'x' is equal to CHECK_X".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59121
llvm-svn: 359037
Summary:
The existing CTU mechanism imports `FunctionDecl`s where the definition is available in another TU. This patch extends that to VarDecls, to bind more constants.
- Add VarDecl importing functionality to CrossTranslationUnitContext
- Import Decls while traversing them in AnalysisConsumer
- Add VarDecls to CTU external mappings generator
- Name changes from "external function map" to "external definition map"
Reviewers: NoQ, dcoughlin, xazax.hun, george.karpenkov, martong
Reviewed By: xazax.hun
Subscribers: Charusso, baloghadamsoftware, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, george.karpenkov, mgorny, whisperity, szepet, rnkovacs, a.sidorin, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46421
llvm-svn: 358968
When growing a body on a body farm, it's essential to use the same redeclaration
of the function that's going to be used during analysis. Otherwise our
ParmVarDecls won't match the ones that are used to identify argument regions.
This boils down to trusting the reasoning in AnalysisDeclContext. We shouldn't
canonicalize the declaration before farming the body because it makes us not
obey the sophisticated decision-making process of AnalysisDeclContext.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60899
llvm-svn: 358946
Stuffing invalid source locations (such as those in functions produced by
body farms) into path diagnostics causes crashes.
Fix a typo in a nearby function name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60808
llvm-svn: 358945
Implement cplusplus.SmartPtrModeling, a new checker that doesn't
emit any warnings but models methods of smart pointers more precisely.
For now the only thing it does is make `(bool) P` return false when `P`
is a freshly moved pointer. This addresses a false positive in the
use-after-move-checker.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60796
llvm-svn: 358944
Moved UninitializedObjectChecker from the 'alpha.cplusplus' to the
'optin.cplusplus' package.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58573
llvm-svn: 358797
TL;DR:
* Add checker and package options to the TableGen files
* Added a new class called CmdLineOption, and both Package and Checker recieved
a list<CmdLineOption> field.
* Added every existing checker and package option to Checkers.td.
* The CheckerRegistry class
* Received some comments to most of it's inline classes
* Received the CmdLineOption and PackageInfo inline classes, a list of
CmdLineOption was added to CheckerInfo and PackageInfo
* Added addCheckerOption and addPackageOption
* Added a new field called Packages, used in addPackageOptions, filled up in
addPackage
Detailed description:
In the last couple months, a lot of effort was put into tightening the
analyzer's command line interface. The main issue is that it's spectacularly
easy to mess up a lenghty enough invocation of the analyzer, and the user was
given no warnings or errors at all in that case.
We can divide the effort of resolving this into several chapters:
* Non-checker analyzer configurations:
Gather every analyzer configuration into a dedicated file. Emit errors for
non-existent configurations or incorrect values. Be able to list these
configurations. Tighten AnalyzerOptions interface to disallow making such
a mistake in the future.
* Fix the "Checker Naming Bug" by reimplementing checker dependencies:
When cplusplus.InnerPointer was enabled, it implicitly registered
unix.Malloc, which implicitly registered some sort of a modeling checker
from the CStringChecker family. This resulted in all of these checker
objects recieving the name "cplusplus.InnerPointer", making AnalyzerOptions
asking for the wrong checker options from the command line:
cplusplus.InnerPointer:Optimisic
istead of
unix.Malloc:Optimistic.
This was resolved by making CheckerRegistry responsible for checker
dependency handling, instead of checkers themselves.
* Checker options: (this patch included!)
Same as the first item, but for checkers.
(+ minor fixes here and there, and everything else that is yet to come)
There were several issues regarding checker options, that non-checker
configurations didn't suffer from: checker plugins are loaded runtime, and they
could add new checkers and new options, meaning that unlike for non-checker
configurations, we can't collect every checker option purely by generating code.
Also, as seen from the "Checker Naming Bug" issue raised above, they are very
rarely used in practice, and all sorts of skeletons fell out of the closet while
working on this project.
They were extremely problematic for users as well, purely because of how long
they were. Consider the following monster of a checker option:
alpha.cplusplus.UninitializedObject:CheckPointeeInitialization=false
While we were able to verify whether the checker itself (the part before the
colon) existed, any errors past that point were unreported, easily resulting
in 7+ hours of analyses going to waste.
This patch, similarly to how dependencies were reimplemented, uses TableGen to
register checker options into Checkers.td, so that Checkers.inc now contains
entries for both checker and package options. Using the preprocessor,
Checkers.inc is converted into code in CheckerRegistry, adding every builtin
(checkers and packages that have an entry in the Checkers.td file) checker and
package option to the registry. The new addPackageOption and addCheckerOption
functions expose the same functionality to statically-linked non-builtin and
plugin checkers and packages as well.
Emitting errors for incorrect user input, being able to list these options, and
some other functionalies will land in later patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57855
llvm-svn: 358752
Ideally, there is no reason behind not being able to depend on checkers that
come from a different plugin (or on builtin checkers) -- however, this is only
possible if all checkers are added to the registry before resolving checker
dependencies. Since I used a binary search in my addDependency method, this also
resulted in an assertion failure (due to CheckerRegistry::Checkers not being
sorted), since the function used by plugins to register their checkers
(clang_registerCheckers) calls addDependency.
This patch resolves this issue by only noting which dependencies have to
established when addDependency is called, and resolves them at a later stage
when no more checkers are added to the registry, by which point
CheckerRegistry::Checkers is already sorted.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59461
llvm-svn: 358750
Default RegionStore bindings represent values that can be obtained by loading
from anywhere within the region, not just the specific offset within the region
that they are said to be bound to. For example, default-binding a character \0
to an int (eg., via memset()) means that the whole int is 0, not just
that its lower byte is 0.
Even though memset and bzero were modeled this way, it didn't work correctly
when applied to simple variables. Eg., in
int x;
memset(x, 0, sizeof(x));
we did produce a default binding, but were unable to read it later, and 'x'
was perceived as an uninitialized variable even after memset.
At the same time, if we replace 'x' with a variable of a structure or array
type, accessing fields or elements of such variable was working correctly,
which was enough for most cases. So this was only a problem for variables of
simple integer/enumeration/floating-point/pointer types.
Fix loading default bindings from RegionStore for regions of simple variables.
Add a unit test to document the API contract as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60742
llvm-svn: 358722
For the following code snippet:
void builtin_function_call_crash_fixes(char *c) {
__builtin_strncpy(c, "", 6);
__builtin_memset(c, '\0', (0));
__builtin_memcpy(c, c, 0);
}
security.insecureAPI.DeprecatedOrUnsafeBufferHandling caused a regression, as it
didn't recognize functions starting with __builtin_. Fixed exactly that.
I wanted to modify an existing test file, but the two I found didn't seem like
perfect candidates. While I was there, I prettified their RUN: lines.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59812
llvm-svn: 358609
Writing stuff into an argument variable is usually equivalent to writing stuff
to a local variable: it will have no effect outside of the function.
There's an important exception from this rule: if the argument variable has
a non-trivial destructor, the destructor would be invoked on
the parent stack frame, exposing contents of the otherwise dead
argument variable to the caller.
If such argument is the last place where a pointer is stored before the function
exits and the function is the one we've started our analysis from (i.e., we have
no caller context for it), we currently diagnose a leak. This is incorrect
because the destructor of the argument still has access to the pointer.
The destructor may deallocate the pointer or even pass it further.
Treat writes into such argument regions as "escapes" instead, suppressing
spurious memory leak reports but not messing with dead symbol removal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60112
llvm-svn: 358321
The idea behind this heuristic is that normally the visitor is there to
inform the user that a certain function may fail to initialize a certain
out-parameter. For system header functions this is usually dictated by the
contract, and it's unlikely that the header function has accidentally
forgot to put the value into the out-parameter; it's more likely
that the user has intentionally skipped the error check.
Warnings on skipped error checks are more like security warnings;
they aren't necessarily useful for all users, and they should instead
be introduced on a per-API basis.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60107
llvm-svn: 357810
__builtin_constant_p(x) is a compiler builtin that evaluates to 1 when
its argument x is a compile-time constant and to 0 otherwise. In CodeGen
it is simply lowered to the respective LLVM intrinsic. In the Analyzer
we've been trying to delegate modeling to Expr::EvaluateAsInt, which is
allowed to sometimes fail for no apparent reason.
When it fails, let's conservatively return false. Modeling it as false
is pretty much never wrong, and it is only required to return true
on a best-effort basis, which every user should expect.
Fixes VLAChecker false positives on code that tries to emulate
static asserts in C by constructing a VLA of dynamic size -1 under the
assumption that this dynamic size is actually a constant
in the sense of __builtin_constant_p.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60110
llvm-svn: 357557
It turns out that SourceManager::isInSystemHeader() crashes when an invalid
source location is passed into it. Invalid source locations are relatively
common: not only they come from body farms, but also, say, any function in C
that didn't come with a forward declaration would have an implicit
forward declaration with invalid source locations.
There's a more comfy API for us to use in the Static Analyzer:
CallEvent::isInSystemHeader(), so just use that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59901
llvm-svn: 357329
It is now an inter-checker communication API, similar to the one that
connects MallocChecker/CStringChecker/InnerPointerChecker: simply a set of
setters and getters for a state trait.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59861
llvm-svn: 357326
The transfer function for the CFG element that represents a logical operation
computes the value of the operation and does nothing else. The element
appears after all the short circuit decisions were made, so they don't need
to be made again at this point.
Because our expression evaluation is imprecise, it is often hard to
discriminate between:
(1) we don't know the value of the RHS because we failed to evaluate it
and
(2) we don't know the value of the RHS because it didn't need to be evaluated.
This is hard because it depends on our knowledge about the value of the LHS
(eg., if LHS is true, then RHS in (LHS || RHS) doesn't need to be computed)
but LHS itself may have been evaluated imprecisely and we don't know whether
it is true or not. Additionally, the Analyzer wouldn't necessarily even remember
what the value of the LHS was because theoretically it's not really necessary
to know it for any future evaluations.
In order to work around these issues, the transfer function for logical
operations consists in looking at the ExplodedGraph we've constructed so far
in order to figure out from which CFG direction did we arrive here.
Such post-factum backtracking that doesn't involve looking up LHS and RHS values
is usually possible. However sometimes it fails because when we deduplicate
exploded nodes with the same program point and the same program state we may end
up in a situation when we reached the same program point from two or more
different directions.
By removing the assertion, we admit that the procedure indeed sometimes fails to
work. When it fails, we also admit that we don't know the value of the logical
operator.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59857
llvm-svn: 357325
Almost all path-sensitive checkers need to tell the user when something specific
to that checker happens along the execution path but does not constitute a bug
on its own. For instance, a call to operator delete in C++ has consequences
that are specific to a use-after-free bug. Deleting an object is not a bug
on its own, but when the Analyzer finds an execution path on which a deleted
object is used, it'll have to explain to the user when exactly during that path
did the deallocation take place.
Historically such custom notes were added by implementing "bug report visitors".
These visitors were post-processing bug reports by visiting every ExplodedNode
along the path and emitting path notes whenever they noticed that a change that
is relevant to a bug report occurs within the program state. For example,
it emits a "memory is deallocated" note when it notices that a pointer changes
its state from "allocated" to "deleted".
The "visitor" approach is powerful and efficient but hard to use because
such preprocessing implies that the developer first models the effects
of the event (say, changes the pointer's state from "allocated" to "deleted"
as part of operator delete()'s transfer function) and then forgets what happened
and later tries to reverse-engineer itself and figure out what did it do
by looking at the report.
The proposed approach tries to avoid discarding the information that was
available when the transfer function was evaluated. Instead, it allows the
developer to capture all the necessary information into a closure that
will be automatically invoked later in order to produce the actual note.
This should reduce boilerplate and avoid very painful logic duplication.
On the technical side, the closure is a lambda that's put into a special kind of
a program point tag, and a special bug report visitor visits all nodes in the
report and invokes all note-producing closures it finds along the path.
For now it is up to the lambda to make sure that the note is actually relevant
to the report. For instance, a memory deallocation note would be irrelevant when
we're reporting a division by zero bug or if we're reporting a use-after-free
of a different, unrelated chunk of memory. The lambda can figure these thing out
by looking at the bug report object that's passed into it.
A single checker is refactored to make use of the new functionality: MIGChecker.
Its program state is trivial, making it an easy testing ground for the first
version of the API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58367
llvm-svn: 357323
Since rL335814, if the constraint manager cannot find a range set for `A - B`
(where `A` and `B` are symbols) it looks for a range for `B - A` and returns
it negated if it exists. However, if a range set for both `A - B` and `B - A`
is stored then it only returns the first one. If we both use `A - B` and
`B - A`, these expressions behave as two totally unrelated symbols. This way
we miss some useful deductions which may lead to false negatives or false
positives.
This tiny patch changes this behavior: if the symbolic expression the
constraint manager is looking for is a difference `A - B`, it tries to
retrieve the range for both `A - B` and `B - A` and if both exists it returns
the intersection of range `A - B` and the negated range of `B - A`. This way
every time a checker applies new constraints to the symbolic difference or to
its negated it always affects both the original difference and its negated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55007
llvm-svn: 357167
r356634 didn't fix all the problems caused by r356222 - even though simple
constructors involving transparent init-list expressions are now evaluated
precisely, many more complicated constructors aren't, for other reasons.
The attached test case is an example of a constructor that will never be
evaluated precisely - simply because there isn't a constructor there (instead,
the program invokes run-time undefined behavior by returning without a return
statement that should have constructed the return value).
Fix another part of the problem for such situations: evaluate transparent
init-list expressions transparently, so that to avoid creating ill-formed
"transparent" nonloc::CompoundVals.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59622
llvm-svn: 356969
When searching for construction contexts, i.e. figuring out which statements
define the object that is constructed by each construct-expression, ignore
transparent init-list expressions because they don't add anything to the
context. This allows the Static Analyzer to model construction, destruction,
materialization, lifetime extension correctly in more cases. Also fixes
a crash caused by incorrectly evaluating initial values of variables
initialized with such expressions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59573
llvm-svn: 356634
These diagnose overflowing calls to subset of fortifiable functions. Some
functions, like sprintf or strcpy aren't supported right not, but we should
probably support these in the future. We previously supported this kind of
functionality with -Wbuiltin-memcpy-chk-size, but that diagnostic doesn't work
with _FORTIFY implementations that use wrapper functions. Also unlike that
diagnostic, we emit these warnings regardless of whether _FORTIFY_SOURCE is
actually enabled, which is nice for programs that don't enable the runtime
checks.
Why not just use diagnose_if, like Bionic does? We can get better diagnostics in
the compiler (i.e. mention the sizes), and we have the potential to diagnose
sprintf and strcpy which is impossible with diagnose_if (at least, in languages
that don't support C++14 constexpr). This approach also saves standard libraries
from having to add diagnose_if.
rdar://48006655
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58797
llvm-svn: 356397
Summary:
If the constraint information is not changed between two program states the
analyzer has not learnt new information and made no report. But it is
possible to happen because we have no information at all. The new approach
evaluates the condition to determine if that is the case and let the user
know we just `Assuming...` some value.
Reviewers: NoQ, george.karpenkov
Reviewed By: NoQ
Subscribers: llvm-commits, xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin,
mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, gsd, gerazo
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57410
llvm-svn: 356323
Summary: If the constraint information is not changed between two program states the analyzer has not learnt new information and made no report. But it is possible to happen because we have no information at all. The new approach evaluates the condition to determine if that is the case and let the user know we just 'Assuming...' some value.
Reviewers: NoQ, george.karpenkov
Reviewed By: NoQ
Subscribers: xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, gsd, gerazo
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57410
llvm-svn: 356319
Don't crash when a function has a name that starts with "CF" and ends with
"Retain" but takes 0 arguments. In particular, don't try to treat it as if
it returns its first argument.
These problems are inevitable because the checker is naming-convention-based,
but at least we shouldn't crash.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59123
llvm-svn: 356223
RegionStore now knows how to bind a nonloc::CompoundVal that represents the
value of an aggregate initializer when it has its initial segment of sub-values
correspond to base classes.
Additionally, fixes the crash from pr40022.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59054
llvm-svn: 356222
For a rather short code snippet, if debug.ReportStmts (added in this patch) was
enabled, a bug reporter visitor crashed:
struct h {
operator int();
};
int k() {
return h();
}
Ultimately, this originated from PathDiagnosticLocation::createMemberLoc, as it
didn't handle the case where it's MemberExpr typed parameter returned and
invalid SourceLocation for MemberExpr::getMemberLoc. The solution was to find
any related valid SourceLocaion, and Stmt::getBeginLoc happens to be just that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58777
llvm-svn: 356161
Checking whether two regions are the same is a partially decidable problem:
either we know for sure that they are the same or we cannot decide. A typical
case for this are the symbolic regions based on conjured symbols. Two
different conjured symbols are either the same or they are different. Since
we cannot decide this and want to reduce false positives as much as possible
we exclude these regions whenever checking whether two containers are the
same at iterator mismatch check.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53754
llvm-svn: 356049
Buildbot breaks when LLVm is compiled with memory sanitizer.
WARNING: MemorySanitizer: use-of-uninitialized-value
#0 0xa3d16d8 in getMacroNameAndPrintExpansion(blahblah)
lib/StaticAnalyzer/Core/PlistDiagnostics.cpp:903:11
llvm-svn: 355911
When there is a functor-like macro which is passed as parameter to another
"function" macro then its parameters are not listed at the place of expansion:
#define foo(x) int bar() { return x; }
#define hello(fvar) fvar(0)
hello(foo)
int main() { 1 / bar(); }
Expansion of hello(foo) asserted Clang, because it expected an l_paren token in
the 3rd line after "foo", since it is a function-like token.
Patch by Tibor Brunner!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57893
llvm-svn: 355903
In the commited testfile, macro expansion (the one implemented for the plist
output) runs into an infinite recursion. The issue originates from the algorithm
being faulty, as in
#define value REC_MACRO_FUNC(value)
the "value" is being (or at least attempted) expanded from the same macro.
The solved this issue by gathering already visited macros in a set, which does
resolve the crash, but will result in an incorrect macro expansion, that would
preferably be fixed down the line.
Patch by Tibor Brunner!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57891
llvm-svn: 355705
Asserting on invalid input isn't very nice, hence the patch to emit an error
instead.
This is the first of many patches to overhaul the way we handle checker options.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57850
llvm-svn: 355704
Summary:
When comparing a symbolic region and a constant, the constant would be
widened or truncated to the width of a void pointer, meaning that the
constant could be incorrectly truncated when handling symbols for
non-default address spaces. In the attached test case this resulted in a
false positive since the constant was truncated to zero. To fix this,
widen/truncate the constant to the width of the symbol expression's
type.
This commit does not consider non-symbolic regions as I'm not sure how
to generalize getting the type there.
This fixes PR40814.
Reviewers: NoQ, zaks.anna, george.karpenkov
Reviewed By: NoQ
Subscribers: xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, jdoerfert, Charusso, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58665
llvm-svn: 355592
The gets function has no SrcArgs. Because the default value for isTainted was
false, it didn't mark its DstArgs as tainted.
Patch by Gábor Borsik!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58828
llvm-svn: 355396
With r354643, the checker is feature-rich and polished enough.
rdar://problem/35380337
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58397
llvm-svn: 354644
Add more "consuming" functions. For now only vm_deallocate() was supported.
Add a non-zero value that isn't an error; this value is -305 ("MIG_NO_REPLY")
and it's fine to deallocate data when you are returning this error.
Make sure that the mig_server_routine annotation is inherited.
rdar://problem/35380337
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58397
llvm-svn: 354643
When a MIG server routine argument is released in an automatic destructor,
the Static Analyzer thinks that this happens after the return statement, and so
the violation of the MIG convention doesn't happen.
Of course, it doesn't quite work that way, so this is a false negative.
Add a hack that makes the checker double-check at the end of function
that no argument was released when the routine fails with an error.
rdar://problem/35380337
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58392
llvm-svn: 354642
Add a BugReporterVisitor for highlighting the events of deallocating a
parameter. All such events are relevant to the emitted report (as long as the
report is indeed emitted), so all of them will get highlighted.
Add a trackExpressionValue visitor for highlighting where does the error return
code come from.
Do not add a trackExpressionValue visitor for highlighting how the deallocated
argument(s) was(were) copied around. This still remains to be implemented.
rdar://problem/35380337
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58368
llvm-svn: 354641
r354530 has added a new function/block/message attribute "mig_server_routine"
that attracts compiler's attention to functions that need to follow the MIG
server routine convention with respect to deallocating out-of-line data that
was passed to them as an argument.
Teach the checker to identify MIG routines by looking at this attribute,
rather than by making heuristic-based guesses.
rdar://problem/35380337
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/58366
llvm-svn: 354638
This checker detects use-after-free bugs in (various forks of) the Mach kernel
that are caused by errors in MIG server routines - functions called remotely by
MIG clients. The MIG convention forces the server to only deallocate objects
it receives from the client when the routine is executed successfully.
Otherwise, if the server routine exits with an error, the client assumes that
it needs to deallocate the out-of-line data it passed to the server manually.
This means that deallocating such data within the MIG routine and then returning
a non-zero error code is always a dangerous use-after-free bug.
rdar://problem/35380337
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57558
llvm-svn: 354635
Accidentally left this dependency out, resulting in an assert failure if
only valist.Uninitialized is enabled from the valist package.
llvm-svn: 354235
Summary:
This makes it consistent with `memcmp` and `__builtin_bcmp`.
Also see the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D56593.
Reviewers: jyknight
Subscribers: kristina, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58120
llvm-svn: 354023
FindLastStoreBRVisitor tries to find the first node in the exploded graph where
the current value was assigned to a region. This node is called the "store
site". It is identified by a pair of Pred and Succ nodes where Succ already has
the binding for the value while Pred does not have it. However the visitor
mistakenly identifies a node pair as the store site where the value is a
`LazyCompoundVal` and `Pred` does not have a store yet but `Succ` has it. In
this case the `LazyCompoundVal` is different in the `Pred` node because it also
contains the store which is different in the two nodes. This error may lead to
crashes (a declaration is cast to a parameter declaration without check) or
misleading bug path notes.
In this patch we fix this problem by checking for unequal `LazyCompoundVals`: if
their region is equal, and their store is the same as the store of their nodes
we consider them as equal when looking for the "store site". This is an
approximation because we do not check for differences of the subvalues
(structure members or array elements) in the stores.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58067
llvm-svn: 353943
Basically the same issue as string init, except it didn't really have
any visible consequences before I removed the implicit lvalue-to-rvalue
conversion from CodeGen.
While I'm here, a couple minor drive-by cleanups: IgnoreParens never
returns a ConstantExpr, and there was a potential crash with string init
involving a ChooseExpr.
The analyzer test change maybe indicates we could simplify the analyzer
code a little with this fix? Apparently a hack was added to support
lvalues in initializers in r315750, but I'm not really familiar with the
relevant code.
Fixes regression reported in the kernel build at
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40430#c6 .
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58069
llvm-svn: 353762
There are certain unsafe or deprecated (since C11) buffer handling
functions which should be avoided in safety critical code. They
could cause buffer overflows. A new checker,
'security.insecureAPI.DeprecatedOrUnsafeBufferHandling' warns for
every occurrence of such functions (unsafe or deprecated printf,
scanf family, and other buffer handling functions, which now have
a secure variant).
Patch by Dániel Kolozsvári!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35068
llvm-svn: 353698
oth strlcat and strlcpy cut off their safe bound for the argument value
at sizeof(destination). There's no need to subtract 1 in only one
of these cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57981
rdar://problem/47873212
llvm-svn: 353583
Memory region that correspond to a variable is identified by the variable's
declaration and, in case of local variables, the stack frame it belongs to.
The declaration needs to be canonical, otherwise we'd have two different
memory regions that correspond to the same variable.
Fix such bug for global variables with forward declarations and assert
that no other problems of this kind happen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57619
llvm-svn: 353353
This reverts commit r341722.
The "postponed" mechanism turns out to be necessary in order to handle
situations when a symbolic region is only kept alive by implicit bindings
in the Store. Otherwise the region is never scanned by the Store's worklist
and the binding gets dropped despite being live, as demonstrated
by the newly added tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57554
llvm-svn: 353350
This patch is an implementation of the ideas discussed on the mailing list[1].
The idea is to somewhat heuristically guess whether the field that was confirmed
to be uninitialized is actually guarded with ifs, asserts, switch/cases and so
on. Since this is a syntactic check, it is very much prone to drastically
reduce the amount of reports the checker emits. The reports however that do not
get filtered out though have greater likelihood of them manifesting into actual
runtime errors.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-September/059255.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51866
llvm-svn: 352959
Having an incorrect type for a cast causes the checker to incorrectly
dismiss the operation under ARC, leading to a false positive
use-after-release on the test.
rdar://47709885
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57557
llvm-svn: 352824
Track them for ISL/OS objects by default, and for NS/CF under a flag.
rdar://47536377
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57356
llvm-svn: 352534
When a function takes the address of a field the analyzer will no longer
assume that the function will change other fields of the enclosing structs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57230
llvm-svn: 352473
Summary:
When importing classes we may add a CXXMethodDecl more than once to a CXXRecordDecl when handling overrides. This patch will fix the cases we currently know about and handle the case where we are only dealing with declarations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56936
llvm-svn: 352436
This patch effectively fixes the almost decade old checker naming issue.
The solution is to assert when CheckerManager::getChecker is called on an
unregistered checker, and assert when CheckerManager::registerChecker is called
on a checker that is already registered.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55429
llvm-svn: 352292
Unfortunately, up until now, the fact that certain checkers depended on one
another was known, but how these actually unfolded was hidden deep within the
implementation. For example, many checkers (like RetainCount, Malloc or CString)
modelled a certain functionality, and exposed certain reportable bug types to
the user. For example, while MallocChecker models many many different types of
memory handling, the actual "unix.MallocChecker" checker the user was exposed to
was merely and option to this modeling part.
Other than this being an ugly mess, this issue made resolving the checker naming
issue almost impossible. (The checker naming issue being that if a checker
registered more than one checker within its registry function, both checker
object recieved the same name) Also, if the user explicitly disabled a checker
that was a dependency of another that _was_ explicitly enabled, it implicitly,
without "telling" the user, reenabled it.
Clearly, changing this to a well structured, declarative form, where the
handling of dependencies are done on a higher level is very much preferred.
This patch, among the detailed things later, makes checkers declare their
dependencies within the TableGen file Checkers.td, and exposes the same
functionality to plugins and statically linked non-generated checkers through
CheckerRegistry::addDependency. CheckerRegistry now resolves these dependencies,
makes sure that checkers are added to CheckerManager in the correct order,
and makes sure that if a dependency is disabled, so will be every checker that
depends on it.
In detail:
* Add a new field to the Checker class in CheckerBase.td called Dependencies,
which is a list of Checkers.
* Move unix checkers before cplusplus, as there is no forward declaration in
tblgen :/
* Add the following new checkers:
- StackAddrEscapeBase
- StackAddrEscapeBase
- CStringModeling
- DynamicMemoryModeling (base of the MallocChecker family)
- IteratorModeling (base of the IteratorChecker family)
- ValistBase
- SecuritySyntaxChecker (base of bcmp, bcopy, etc...)
- NSOrCFErrorDerefChecker (base of NSErrorChecker and CFErrorChecker)
- IvarInvalidationModeling (base of IvarInvalidation checker family)
- RetainCountBase (base of RetainCount and OSObjectRetainCount)
* Clear up and registry functions in MallocChecker, happily remove old FIXMEs.
* Add a new addDependency function to CheckerRegistry.
* Neatly format RUN lines in files I looked at while debugging.
Big thanks to Artem Degrachev for all the guidance through this project!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54438
llvm-svn: 352287
The actual implementation of unix.API features a dual-checker: two checkers in
one, even though they don't even interact at all. Split them up, as this is a
problem for establishing dependencies.
I added no new code at all, just merely moved it around.
Since the plist files change (and that's a benefit!) this patch isn't NFC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55425
llvm-svn: 352278