The actual change here is a little more complicated than the summary above.
What we want to do is have our generic inlining tests run under whatever
mode is the default. However, there are some tests that depend on the
presence of C++ inlining, which still has some rough edges. These tests have
been explicitly marked as -analyzer-ipa=inlining in preparation for a new
mode that limits inlining to C functions and blocks. This will be the
default until the false positives for C++ have been brought down to
manageable levels.
llvm-svn: 162317
Our current handling of 'throw' is all CFG-based: it jumps to a 'catch' block
if there is one and the function exit block if not. But this doesn't really
get the right behavior when a function is inlined: execution will continue on
the caller's side, which is always the wrong thing to do.
Even within a single function, 'throw' completely skips any destructors that
are to be run. This is essentially the same problem as @finally -- a CFGBlock
that can have multiple entry points, whose exit points depend on whether it
was entered normally or exceptionally.
Representing 'throw' as a sink matches our current (non-)handling of @throw.
It's not a perfect solution, but it's better than continuing analysis in an
inconsistent or even impossible state.
<rdar://problem/12113713>
llvm-svn: 162157
The CFG approximates @throw as a return statement, but that's not good
enough in inlined functions. Moreover, since Objective-C exceptions are
usually considered fatal, we should be suppressing leak warnings like we
do for calls to noreturn functions (like abort()).
The comments indicate that we were probably intending to do this all along;
it may have been inadvertantly changed during a refactor at one point.
llvm-svn: 162156