The analyzer uses LazyCompoundVals to represent rvalues of aggregate types,
most importantly structs and arrays. This allows us to efficiently copy
around an entire struct, rather than doing a memberwise load every time a
struct rvalue is encountered. This can also keep memory usage down by
allowing several structs to "share" the same snapshotted bindings.
However, /lookup/ through LazyCompoundVals can be expensive, especially
since they can end up chaining back to the original value. While we try
to reuse LazyCompoundVals whenever it's safe, and cache information about
this transitivity, the fact is it's sometimes just not a good idea to
perpetuate LazyCompoundVals -- the tradeoffs just aren't worth it.
This commit changes RegionStore so that binding a LazyCompoundVal to struct
will do a memberwise copy if the struct is simple enough. Today's definition
of "simple enough" is "up to N scalar members" (see below), but that could
easily be changed in the future. This is enough to bring the test case in
PR15697 back down to a manageable analysis time (within 20% of its original
time, in an unfair test where the new analyzer is not compiled with LTO).
The actual value of "N" is controlled by a new -analyzer-config option,
'region-store-small-struct-limit'. It defaults to "2", meaning structs with
zero, one, or two scalar members will be considered "simple enough" for
this code path.
It's worth noting that a more straightforward implementation would do this
on load, not on bind, and make use of the structure we already have for this:
CompoundVal. A long time ago, this was actually how RegionStore modeled
aggregate-to-aggregate copies, but today it's only used for compound literals.
Unfortunately, it seems that we've special-cased LazyCompoundVal in certain
places (such as liveness checks) but failed to similarly special-case
CompoundVal in all of them. Until we're confident that CompoundVal is
handled properly everywhere, this solution is safer, since the entire
optimization is just an implementation detail of RegionStore.
<rdar://problem/13599304>
llvm-svn: 179767
A floating-point version is nice for testing unknown values, but it's
good to be able to check all parts of the structure as well.
Test change only, no functionality change.
llvm-svn: 177455
This fixes a crash when analyzing LLVM that was exposed by r177220 (modeling of
trivial copy/move assignment operators).
When we look up a lazy binding for “Builder”, we see the direct binding of Loc at offset 0.
Previously, we believed the binding, which led to a crash. Now, we do not believe it as
the types do not match.
llvm-svn: 177453
This is essentially the same problem as r174031: a lazy binding for the first
field of a struct may stomp on an existing default binding for the
entire struct. Because of the way RegionStore is set up, we can't help
but lose the top-level binding, but then we need to make sure that accessing
one of the other fields doesn't come back as Undefined.
In this case, RegionStore is now correctly detecting that the lazy binding
we have isn't the right type, but then failing to follow through on the
implications of that: we don't know anything about the other fields in the
aggregate. This fix adds a test when searching for other kinds of default
values to see if there's a lazy binding we rejected, and if so returns
a symbolic value instead of Undefined.
The long-term fix for this is probably a new Store model; see
<rdar://problem/12701038>.
Fixes <rdar://problem/13292559>.
llvm-svn: 176144
This is a hack to work around the fact that we don't track extents for our
default bindings:
CGPoint p;
p.x = 0.0;
p.y = 0.0;
rectParam.origin = p;
use(rectParam.size); // warning: uninitialized value in rectParam.size.width
In this case, the default binding for 'p' gets copied into 'rectParam',
because the 'origin' field is at offset 0 within CGRect. From then on,
rectParam's old default binding (in this case a symbol) is lost.
This patch silences the warning by pretending that lazy bindings are never
made from uninitialized memory, but not only is that not true, the original
default binding is still getting overwritten (see FIXME test cases).
The long-term solution is tracked in <rdar://problem/12701038>
PR14765 and <rdar://problem/12875012>
llvm-svn: 174031
- This is designed to make it obvious that %clang_cc1 is a "test variable"
which is substituted. It is '%clang_cc1' instead of '%clang -cc1' because it
can be useful to redefine what gets run as 'clang -cc1' (for example, to set
a default target).
llvm-svn: 91446
and replace the 'clang-cc' option '-analyzer-store=basic-new-cast' with
'-analyzer-store=basic-old-cast'. We'll keep the old CastRegion implementation
around for a little while for regression testing.
llvm-svn: 75209
- Move all analyzer options logic to AnalysisConsumer.cpp.
- Unified specification of stores/constraints/output to be:
-analyzer-output=...
-analyzer-store=...
-analyzer-constraints=...
instead of -analyzer-range-constraints, -analyzer-store-basic, etc.
- Updated drivers (ccc-analyzer, scan-builds, new ccc) to obey this new
interface
- Updated test cases to conform to new driver options
llvm-svn: 64737