1. Changes to the CFG:
When creating the CFG for temporary destructors, we create a structure
that mirrors the branch structure of the conditionally executed
temporary constructors in a full expression.
The branches we create use a CXXBindTemporaryExpr as terminator which
corresponds to the temporary constructor which must have been executed
to enter the destruction branch.
2. Changes to the Analyzer:
When we visit a CXXBindTemporaryExpr we mark the CXXBindTemporaryExpr as
executed in the state; when we reach a branch that contains the
corresponding CXXBindTemporaryExpr as terminator, we branch out
depending on whether the corresponding CXXBindTemporaryExpr was marked
as executed.
llvm-svn: 214962
It's also possible to just write "= nullptr", but there's some question
of whether that's as readable, so I leave it up to authors to pick which
they prefer for now. If we want to discuss standardizing on one or the
other, we can do that at some point in the future.
llvm-svn: 213439
This reverts commit r213307.
Reverting to have some on-list discussion/confirmation about the ongoing
direction of smart pointer usage in the LLVM project.
llvm-svn: 213325
(after fixing a bug in MultiplexConsumer I noticed the ownership of the
nested consumers was implemented with raw pointers - so this fixes
that... and follows the source back to its origin pushing unique_ptr
ownership up through there too)
llvm-svn: 213307
The rewrite facility's footprint is small so it's not worth going to these
lengths to support disabling at configure time, particularly since key compiler
features now depend on it.
Meanwhile the Objective-C rewriters have been moved under the
ENABLE_CLANG_ARCMT umbrella for now as they're comparatively heavy and still
potentially worth excluding from lightweight builds.
Tests are now passing with any combination of feature flags. The flags
historically haven't been tested by LLVM's build servers so caveat emptor.
llvm-svn: 213171
This new checker, alpha.core.TestAfterDivZero, catches issues like this:
int sum = ...
int avg = sum / count; // potential division by zero...
if (count == 0) { ... } // ...caught here
Because the analyzer does not necessarily explore /all/ paths through a program,
this check is restricted to only work on zero checks that immediately follow a
division operation (/ % /= %=). This could later be expanded to handle checks
dominated by a division operation but not necessarily in the same CFG block.
Patch by Anders Rönnholm! (with very minor modifications by me)
llvm-svn: 212731
This silences false positives (leaks, use of uninitialized value) in simple
code that uses containers such as std::vector and std::list. The analyzer
cannot reason about the internal invariances of those data structures which
leads to false positives. Until we come up with a better solution to that
problem, let's just not inline the methods of the containers and allow objects
to escape whenever such methods are called.
This just extends an already existing flag "c++-container-inlining" and applies
the heuristic not only to constructors and destructors of the containers, but
to all of their methods.
We have a bunch of distinct user reports all related to this issue
(radar://16058651, radar://16580751, radar://16384286, radar://16795491
[PR19637]).
llvm-svn: 211832
Doing this caused us to mistakenly think we'd seen a particular state before
when we actually hadn't, which resulted in false negatives. Credit to
Rafael Auler for discovering this issue!
llvm-svn: 211209
This reverts commit r211096. Looks like it broke the msvc build:
SemaOpenMP.cpp(140) : error C4519: default template arguments are only allowed on a class template
llvm-svn: 211113
instead of report-XXXXXX.html, scan-build/clang analyzer generate
report-<filename>-<function, method name>-<function position>-<id>.html.
(id = i++ for several issues found in the same function/method)
llvm-svn: 210970
Fixes a crash in Retain Count checker error reporting logic by handing
the allocation statement retrieval from a BlockEdge program point.
Also added a simple CFG dump routine for debugging.
llvm-svn: 210960
will never be true in a well-defined context. The checking for null pointers
has been moved into the caller logic so it does not rely on undefined behavior.
llvm-svn: 210498
This applies to __attribute__((pure)) as well, but 'const' is more interesting
because many of our builtins are marked 'const'.
PR19661
llvm-svn: 208154
BugReport doesn't take ownership of the bug type, so let the checker own the
the bug type. (Requires making the bug type mutable, which is icky, but which
is also what other checkers do.)
llvm-svn: 208110
Document and simplify ResolveCondition.
1. Introduce a temporary special case for temporary desctructors when resolving
the branch condition - in an upcoming patch, alexmc will change temporary
destructor conditions to not run through this logic, in which case we can remove
this (marked as FIXME); this currently fixes a crash.
2. Simplify ResolveCondition; while documenting the function, I noticed that it
always returns the last statement - either that statement is the condition
itself (in which case the condition was returned anyway), or the rightmost
leaf is returned; for correctness, the rightmost leaf must be evaluated anyway
(which the CFG does in the last statement), thus we can just return the last
statement in that case, too. Added an assert to verify the invariant.
llvm-svn: 207957
a std::vector that allocates on the heap. As a consequence, we have to
run all of their destructors when tearing down the set, not just
deallocate the memory blobs.
llvm-svn: 207902
While we don't model pointer-to-member operators yet (neither .* nor ->*),
CallAndMessageChecker still checks to make sure the 'this' object is not
null or undefined first. However, it also expects that the object should
always have a valid MemRegion, something that's generally important elsewhere
in the analyzer as well. Ensure this is true ahead of time, just like we do
for member access.
PR19531
llvm-svn: 207561
definition below all of the header #include lines, clang edition.
If you want more details about this, you can see some of the commits to
Debug.h in LLVM recently. This is just the clang section of a cleanup
I've done for all uses of DEBUG_TYPE in LLVM.
llvm-svn: 206849
This also includes some infrastructure to make it easier to build multi-argument
selectors, rather than trying to use string matching on each piece. There's a bit
more setup code, but less cost at runtime.
PR18908
llvm-svn: 205827
Fixes a false positive when temporary destructors are enabled where a temporary
is destroyed after a variable is constructed but before the VarDecl itself is
processed, which occurs when the variable is in the condition of an if or while.
Patch by Alex McCarthy, with an extra test from me.
llvm-svn: 205661
If we're trying to get the zero element region of something that's not a region,
we should be returning UnknownVal, which is what ProgramState::getLValue will
do for us.
Patch by Alex McCarthy!
llvm-svn: 205327
Add M_ZERO awareness to malloc() static analysis in Clang for FreeBSD,
NetBSD, and OpenBSD in a similar fashion to O_CREAT for open(2).
These systems have a three-argument malloc() in the kernel where the
third argument contains flags; the M_ZERO flag will zero-initialize the
allocated buffer.
This should reduce the number of false positives when running static
analysis on BSD kernels.
Additionally, add kmalloc() (Linux kernel malloc()) and treat __GFP_ZERO
like M_ZERO on Linux.
Future work involves a better method of checking for named flags without
hardcoding values.
Patch by Conrad Meyer, with minor modifications by me.
llvm-svn: 204832
A refinement of r198953 to handle cases where an object is accessed both through
a property getter and through direct ivar access. An object accessed through a
property should always be treated as +0, i.e. not owned by the caller. However,
an object accessed through an ivar may be at +0 or at +1, depending on whether
the ivar is a strong reference. Outside of ARC, we don't have that information,
so we just don't track objects accessed through ivars.
With this change, accessing an ivar directly will deliberately override the +0
provided by a getter, but only if the +0 hasn't participated in other retain
counting yet. That isn't perfect, but it's already unusual for people to be
mixing property access with direct ivar access. (The primary use case for this
is in setters, init methods, and -dealloc.)
Thanks to Ted for spotting a few mistakes in private review.
<rdar://problem/16333368>
llvm-svn: 204730
Drive-by fixing some incorrect types where a for loop would be improperly using ObjCInterfaceDecl::protocol_iterator. No functional changes in these cases.
llvm-svn: 203842
Passing a pointer to an uninitialized memory buffer is normally okay,
but if the function is declared to take a pointer-to-const then it's
very unlikely it will be modifying the buffer. In this case the analyzer
should warn that there will likely be a read of uninitialized memory.
This doesn't check all elements of an array, only the first one.
It also doesn't yet check Objective-C methods, only C functions and
C++ methods.
This is controlled by a new check: alpha.core.CallAndMessageUnInitRefArg.
Patch by Per Viberg!
llvm-svn: 203822
Like the binary operator check of r201702, this actually checks the
condition of every if in a chain against every other condition, an
O(N^2) operation. In most cases N should be small enough to make this
practical, and checking all cases like this makes it much more likely
to catch a copy-paste error within the same series of branches.
Part of IdenticalExprChecker; patch by Daniel Fahlgren!
llvm-svn: 203585