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
For now, just ignore them. Later, we could try looking through LazyCompoundVals,
but we at least shouldn't crash.
<rdar://problem/16153464>
llvm-svn: 202212
This does;
- clang_tablegen() adds each tblgen'd target to global property CLANG_TABLEGEN_TARGETS as list.
- List of targets is added to LLVM_COMMON_DEPENDS.
- all clang libraries and targets depend on generated headers.
You might wonder this would be regression, but in fact, this is little loss.
- Almost all of clang libraries depend on tblgen'd files and clang-tblgen.
- clang-tblgen may cause short stall-out but doesn't cause unconditional rebuild.
- Each library's dependencies to tblgen'd files might vary along headers' structure.
It made hard to track and update *really optimal* dependencies.
Each dependency to intrinsics_gen and ClangSACheckers is left as DEPENDS.
llvm-svn: 201842
Somehow both Daniel and I missed the fact that while loops are only identical
if they have identical bodies.
Patch by Daniel Fahlgren!
llvm-svn: 201829
IdenticalExprChecker now warns if any expressions in a logical or bitwise
chain (&&, ||, &, |, or ^) are the same. Unlike the previous patch, this
actually checks all subexpressions against each other (an O(N^2) operation,
but N is likely to be small).
Patch by Daniel Fahlgren!
llvm-svn: 201702
This extends the checks for identical expressions to handle identical
statements, and compares the consequent and alternative ("then" and "else")
branches of an if-statement to see if they are identical, treating a single
statement surrounded by braces as equivalent to one without braces.
This does /not/ check subsequent branches in an if/else chain, let alone
branches that are not consecutive. This may improve in a future patch, but
it would certainly take more work.
Patch by Daniel Fahlgren!
llvm-svn: 201701
This implements FIXME from Checker.cpp (FIXME: We want to return the package + name of the checker here.) and replaces hardcoded checker names with the new ones obtained via getCheckName().getName().
llvm-svn: 201525
Summary:
In clang-tidy we'd like to know the name of the checker producing each
diagnostic message. PathDiagnostic has BugType and Category fields, which are
both arbitrary human-readable strings, but we need to know the exact name of the
checker in the form that can be used in the CheckersControlList option to
enable/disable the specific checker.
This patch adds the CheckName field to the CheckerBase class, and sets it in
the CheckerManager::registerChecker() method, which gets them from the
CheckerRegistry.
Checkers that implement multiple checks have to store the names of each check
in the respective registerXXXChecker method.
Reviewers: jordan_rose, krememek
Reviewed By: jordan_rose
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2557
llvm-svn: 201186
A return type is the declared or deduced part of the function type specified in
the declaration.
A result type is the (potentially adjusted) type of the value of an expression
that calls the function.
Rule of thumb:
* Declarations have return types and parameters.
* Expressions have result types and arguments.
llvm-svn: 200082
Fix a perennial source of confusion in the clang type system: Declarations and
function prototypes have parameters to which arguments are supplied, so calling
these 'arguments' was a stretch even in C mode, let alone C++ where default
arguments, templates and overloading make the distinction important to get
right.
Readability win across the board, especially in the casting, ADL and
overloading implementations which make a lot more sense at a glance now.
Will keep an eye on the builders and update dependent projects shortly.
No functional change.
llvm-svn: 199686
Per discussion with Anna a /long/ time ago, it was way too easy to misuse
BlockCall: because it inherited from AnyFunctionCall (through SimpleCall),
getDecl() was constrained to return a FunctionDecl, and you had to call
getBlockDecl() instead. This goes against the whole point of CallEvent
(to abstract over different ways to invoke bodies of code).
Now, BlockCall just inherits directly from CallEvent. There's a bit of
duplication in getting things out of the origin expression (which is still
known to be a CallExpr), but nothing significant.
llvm-svn: 199321
...by synthesizing their body to be "return self->_prop;", with an extra
nudge to RetainCountChecker to still treat the value as +0 if we have no
other information.
This doesn't handle weak properties, but that's mostly correct anyway,
since they can go to nil at any time. This also doesn't apply to properties
whose implementations we can't see, since they may not be backed by an
ivar at all. And finally, this doesn't handle properties of C++ class type,
because we can't invoke the copy constructor. (Sema has actually done this
work already, but the AST it synthesizes is one the analyzer doesn't quite
handle -- it has an rvalue DeclRefExpr.)
Modeling setters is likely to be more difficult (since it requires
handling strong/copy), but not impossible.
<rdar://problem/11956898>
llvm-svn: 198953
...rather somewhere in the destructor when we try to access something and
realize the object has already been deleted. This is necessary because
the destructor is processed before the 'delete' itself.
Patch by Karthik Bhat!
llvm-svn: 198779
...even though the argument is declared "const void *", because this is
just a way to pass pointers around as objects. (Though NSData is often
a better one.)
PR18262
llvm-svn: 198710
RetainCountChecker has to track returned object values to know if they are
retained or not. Under ARC, even methods that return +1 are tracked by the
system and should be treated as +0. However, this effect behaves exactly
like NotOwned(ObjC), i.e. a generic Objective-C method that actually returns
+0, so we don't need a special case for it.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 198709