when running the analyzer on real projects. We'll keep the change to
AnalysisManager.cpp in r82198 so that -fobjc-gc analyzes code
correctly in both GC and non-GC modes, although this may emit two
diagnostics for each bug in some cases (a better solution will come
later).
llvm-svn: 82201
pruning of diagnostics that may be emitted multiple times. This is
accomplished by adding FoldingSet profiling support to PathDiagnostic,
and then having BugReporter record what diagnostics have been issued.
This was motived to a serious bug introduced by moving the
'divide-by-zero' checking outside of GRExprEngine into a separate
'Checker' class. When analyzing code using the '-fobjc-gc' option, a
given function would be analyzed twice, but the second time various
"internal checks" would be disabled to avoid emitting multiple
diagnostics (e.g., "null dereference") for the same issue. The
problem is that such checks also effect path pruning and don't just
emit diagnostics. This resulted in an assertion failure involving a
real divide-by-zero in some analyzed code where we would get an
assertion failure in APInt because the 'DivZero' check was disabled
and didn't prune the logic that resulted in the divide-by-zero in the
analyzer.
The implemented solution is somewhat of a hack, and may not perform
extremely well. This will need to be cleaned up over time.
As a regression test, 'misc-ps.m' has been modified so that its tests
are run using -fobjc-gc to test this diagnostic pruning behavior.
llvm-svn: 82198
character instead of the entire range for the IfStmt, ForStmt, etc. We may
gradually refine these ranges later, but basically terminator ranges just refer
to the first keyword.
llvm-svn: 69812
lazy PCH deserialization. Propagate that argument wherever it needs to
be. No functionality change, except that I've tightened up a few PCH
tests in preparation.
llvm-svn: 69406
instead of a FullSourceLoc. This resulted in a bunch of small edits in various
clients.
- Updated BugReporter to include an alternate PathDiagnostic generation
algorithm for PathDiagnosticClients desiring more control-flow pieces.
llvm-svn: 68193
- Added a new class, 'PathDiagnosticLocation', that is a variant for
SourceLocation, SourceRange, or Stmt*. This will be used soon by
PathDiagnosticPieces to describe locations for targets of branches, locations
of events, etc.
- Did some prep. refactoring of PathDiagnosticPieces to prepare them for
adopting the new PathDiagnosticLocation
llvm-svn: 67767
- PathDiagnosticControlFlowPiece now consists of a "start" and "end" location
to indicating the branch location and where the branch goes.
BugReporter:
- Updated BugReporter to construct PathDiagnosticControlFlowPiece objects with
"end" locations.
PlistDiagnostics:
- Plists now contain the bug "type" (not just bug "category")
- Plists now encode control-flow pieces differently than events; now the
"start" and "end" locations are recorded
llvm-svn: 66818
- Group control flow and event PathDiagnosticPieces into PathDiagnosticMacroPieces.
- Afterwards, eliminate any PathDiagnosticMacroPieces from a PathDiagnostic that
contain no informative events.
HTMLDiagnostics:
- Use new information about PathDiagnosticMacroPieces to specially format
message bubbles for macro expansions containing interesting events.
llvm-svn: 66524
PathDiagnosticControlFlowPiece to distinguish (in the class hierarchy) between
events and control-flow diagnostic pieces. Clients must now use these directly
when constructing PathDiagnosticPieces.
llvm-svn: 66310
know how to recover from an error, we can attach a hint to the
diagnostic that states how to modify the code, which can be one of:
- Insert some new code (a text string) at a particular source
location
- Remove the code within a given range
- Replace the code within a given range with some new code (a text
string)
Right now, we use these hints to annotate diagnostic information. For
example, if one uses the '>>' in a template argument in C++98, as in
this code:
template<int I> class B { };
B<1000 >> 2> *b1;
we'll warn that the behavior will change in C++0x. The fix is to
insert parenthese, so we use code insertion annotations to illustrate
where the parentheses go:
test.cpp:10:10: warning: use of right-shift operator ('>>') in template
argument will require parentheses in C++0x
B<1000 >> 2> *b1;
^
( )
Use of these annotations is partially implemented for HTML
diagnostics, but it's not (yet) producing valid HTML, which may be
related to PR2386, so it has been #if 0'd out.
In this future, we could consider hooking this mechanism up to the
rewriter to actually try to fix these problems during compilation (or,
after a compilation whose only errors have fixes). For now, however, I
suggest that we use these code modification hints whenever we can, so
that we get better diagnostics now and will have better coverage when
we find better ways to use this information.
This also fixes PR3410 by placing the complaint about missing tokens
just after the previous token (rather than at the location of the next
token).
llvm-svn: 65570
are formed. In particular, a diagnostic with all its strings and ranges is now
packaged up and sent to DiagnosticClients as a DiagnosticInfo instead of as a
ton of random stuff. This has the benefit of simplifying the interface, making
it more extensible, and allowing us to do more checking for things like access
past the end of the various arrays passed in.
In addition to introducing DiagnosticInfo, this also substantially changes how
Diagnostic::Report works. Instead of being passed in all of the info required
to issue a diagnostic, Report now takes only the required info (a location and
ID) and returns a fresh DiagnosticInfo *by value*. The caller is then free to
stuff strings and ranges into the DiagnosticInfo with the << operator. When
the dtor runs on the DiagnosticInfo object (which should happen at the end of
the statement), the diagnostic is actually emitted with all of the accumulated
information. This is a somewhat tricky dance, but it means that the
accumulated DiagnosticInfo is allowed to keep pointers to other expression
temporaries without those pointers getting invalidated.
This is just the minimal change to get this stuff working, but this will allow
us to eliminate the zillions of variant "Diag" methods scattered throughout
(e.g.) sema. For example, instead of calling:
Diag(BuiltinLoc, diag::err_overload_no_match, typeNames,
SourceRange(BuiltinLoc, RParenLoc));
We will soon be able to just do:
Diag(BuiltinLoc, diag::err_overload_no_match)
<< typeNames << SourceRange(BuiltinLoc, RParenLoc));
This scales better to support arbitrary types being passed in (not just
strings) in a type-safe way. Go operator overloading?!
llvm-svn: 59502
strings instead of array of strings. This reduces string copying
in some not-very-important cases, but paves the way for future
improvements.
llvm-svn: 59494
* Move FormatError() from TextDiagnostic up to DiagClient, remove now
empty class TextDiagnostic
* Make DiagClient optional for Diagnostic
This fixes the following problems:
* -html-diags (and probably others) does now output the same set of
warnings as console clang does
* nothing crashes if one forgets to call setHeaderSearch() on
TextDiagnostic
* some code duplication is removed
llvm-svn: 54620
them to not be stack-allocated.
HTMLDiagnostics now batches PathDiagnostics before emitting HTML in its dtor.
This is a workaround for a problem when we trampled the Preprocessor state
when highlighting macros (sometimes resulting in an assertion failure).
llvm-svn: 50102