This involves keeping track of three separate types: the symbol type, the
adjustment type, and the comparison type. For example, in "$x + 5 > 0ULL",
if the type of $x is 'signed char', the adjustment type is 'int' and the
comparison type is 'unsigned long long'. Most of the time these three types
will be the same, but we should still do the right thing when the
comparison value is out of range, and wraparound should be calculated in
the adjustment type.
This also re-disables an out-of-bounds test; we were extracting the symbol
from non-additive SymIntExprs, but then throwing away the integer.
Sorry for the large patch; both the basic and range constraint managers needed
to be updated together, since they share code in SimpleConstraintManager.
llvm-svn: 156361
At this point this is largely cosmetic, but it opens the door to replace
ProgramStateRef with a smart pointer that more eagerly acts in the role
of reclaiming unused ProgramState objects.
llvm-svn: 149081
ConstraintManager::canReasonAbout() from the ExprEngine.
ExprEngine should not care if the constraint solver can reason about
something or not. The solver should be able to handle all the SymExprs.
To do this, the solver should be able to keep track of not only the
SymbolData but of all SymExprs. This is why we change SymbolRef to be an
alias of SymExpr*. When encountering an expression it cannot simplify,
the solver should just add the constraints to it.
llvm-svn: 145831
Eventually there will also be a lib/StaticAnalyzer/Frontend that will handle initialization and checker registration.
Yet another library to avoid cyclic dependencies between Core and Checkers.
llvm-svn: 125124