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387 lines
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387 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
Inlining
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========
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There are several options that control which calls the analyzer will consider for
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inlining. The major one is -analyzer-config ipa:
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-analyzer-config ipa=none - All inlining is disabled. This is the only mode
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available in LLVM 3.1 and earlier and in Xcode 4.3 and earlier.
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-analyzer-config ipa=basic-inlining - Turns on inlining for C functions, C++
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static member functions, and blocks -- essentially, the calls that behave
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like simple C function calls. This is essentially the mode used in
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Xcode 4.4.
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-analyzer-config ipa=inlining - Turns on inlining when we can confidently find
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the function/method body corresponding to the call. (C functions, static
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functions, devirtualized C++ methods, Objective-C class methods, Objective-C
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instance methods when ExprEngine is confident about the dynamic type of the
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instance).
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-analyzer-config ipa=dynamic - Inline instance methods for which the type is
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determined at runtime and we are not 100% sure that our type info is
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correct. For virtual calls, inline the most plausible definition.
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-analyzer-config ipa=dynamic-bifurcate - Same as -analyzer-config ipa=dynamic,
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but the path is split. We inline on one branch and do not inline on the
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other. This mode does not drop the coverage in cases when the parent class
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has code that is only exercised when some of its methods are overridden.
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Currently, -analyzer-config ipa=dynamic-bifurcate is the default mode.
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While -analyzer-config ipa determines in general how aggressively the analyzer
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will try to inline functions, several additional options control which types of
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functions can inlined, in an all-or-nothing way. These options use the
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analyzer's configuration table, so they are all specified as follows:
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-analyzer-config OPTION=VALUE
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### c++-inlining ###
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This option controls which C++ member functions may be inlined.
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-analyzer-config c++-inlining=[none | methods | constructors | destructors]
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Each of these modes implies that all the previous member function kinds will be
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inlined as well; it doesn't make sense to inline destructors without inlining
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constructors, for example.
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The default c++-inlining mode is 'destructors', meaning that all member
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functions with visible definitions will be considered for inlining. In some
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cases the analyzer may still choose not to inline the function.
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Note that under 'constructors', constructors for types with non-trivial
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destructors will not be inlined. Additionally, no C++ member functions will be
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inlined under -analyzer-config ipa=none or -analyzer-config ipa=basic-inlining,
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regardless of the setting of the c++-inlining mode.
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### c++-template-inlining ###
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This option controls whether C++ templated functions may be inlined.
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-analyzer-config c++-template-inlining=[true | false]
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Currently, template functions are considered for inlining by default.
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The motivation behind this option is that very generic code can be a source
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of false positives, either by considering paths that the caller considers
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impossible (by some unstated precondition), or by inlining some but not all
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of a deep implementation of a function.
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### c++-stdlib-inlining ###
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This option controls whether functions from the C++ standard library, including
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methods of the container classes in the Standard Template Library, should be
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considered for inlining.
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-analyzer-config c++-stdlib-inlining=[true | false]
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Currently, C++ standard library functions are considered for inlining by
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default.
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The standard library functions and the STL in particular are used ubiquitously
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enough that our tolerance for false positives is even lower here. A false
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positive due to poor modeling of the STL leads to a poor user experience, since
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most users would not be comfortable adding assertions to system headers in order
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to silence analyzer warnings.
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### c++-container-inlining ###
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This option controls whether constructors and destructors of "container" types
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should be considered for inlining.
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-analyzer-config c++-container-inlining=[true | false]
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Currently, these constructors and destructors are NOT considered for inlining
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by default.
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The current implementation of this setting checks whether a type has a member
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named 'iterator' or a member named 'begin'; these names are idiomatic in C++,
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with the latter specified in the C++11 standard. The analyzer currently does a
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fairly poor job of modeling certain data structure invariants of container-like
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objects. For example, these three expressions should be equivalent:
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std::distance(c.begin(), c.end()) == 0
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c.begin() == c.end()
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c.empty())
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Many of these issues are avoided if containers always have unknown, symbolic
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state, which is what happens when their constructors are treated as opaque.
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In the future, we may decide specific containers are "safe" to model through
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inlining, or choose to model them directly using checkers instead.
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Basics of Implementation
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-----------------------
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The low-level mechanism of inlining a function is handled in
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ExprEngine::inlineCall and ExprEngine::processCallExit.
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If the conditions are right for inlining, a CallEnter node is created and added
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to the analysis work list. The CallEnter node marks the change to a new
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LocationContext representing the called function, and its state includes the
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contents of the new stack frame. When the CallEnter node is actually processed,
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its single successor will be a edge to the first CFG block in the function.
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Exiting an inlined function is a bit more work, fortunately broken up into
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reasonable steps:
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1. The CoreEngine realizes we're at the end of an inlined call and generates a
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CallExitBegin node.
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2. ExprEngine takes over (in processCallExit) and finds the return value of the
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function, if it has one. This is bound to the expression that triggered the
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call. (In the case of calls without origin expressions, such as destructors,
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this step is skipped.)
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3. Dead symbols and bindings are cleaned out from the state, including any local
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bindings.
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4. A CallExitEnd node is generated, which marks the transition back to the
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caller's LocationContext.
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5. Custom post-call checks are processed and the final nodes are pushed back
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onto the work list, so that evaluation of the caller can continue.
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Retry Without Inlining
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----------------------
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In some cases, we would like to retry analysis without inlining a particular
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call.
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Currently, we use this technique to recover coverage in case we stop
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analyzing a path due to exceeding the maximum block count inside an inlined
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function.
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When this situation is detected, we walk up the path to find the first node
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before inlining was started and enqueue it on the WorkList with a special
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ReplayWithoutInlining bit added to it (ExprEngine::replayWithoutInlining). The
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path is then re-analyzed from that point without inlining that particular call.
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Deciding When to Inline
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-----------------------
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In general, the analyzer attempts to inline as much as possible, since it
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provides a better summary of what actually happens in the program. There are
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some cases, however, where the analyzer chooses not to inline:
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- If there is no definition available for the called function or method. In
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this case, there is no opportunity to inline.
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- If the CFG cannot be constructed for a called function, or the liveness
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cannot be computed. These are prerequisites for analyzing a function body,
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with or without inlining.
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- If the LocationContext chain for a given ExplodedNode reaches a maximum cutoff
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depth. This prevents unbounded analysis due to infinite recursion, but also
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serves as a useful cutoff for performance reasons.
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- If the function is variadic. This is not a hard limitation, but an engineering
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limitation.
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Tracked by: <rdar://problem/12147064> Support inlining of variadic functions
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- In C++, constructors are not inlined unless the destructor call will be
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processed by the ExprEngine. Thus, if the CFG was built without nodes for
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implicit destructors, or if the destructors for the given object are not
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represented in the CFG, the constructor will not be inlined. (As an exception,
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constructors for objects with trivial constructors can still be inlined.)
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See "C++ Caveats" below.
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- In C++, ExprEngine does not inline custom implementations of operator 'new'
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or operator 'delete', nor does it inline the constructors and destructors
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associated with these. See "C++ Caveats" below.
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- Calls resulting in "dynamic dispatch" are specially handled. See more below.
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- The FunctionSummaries map stores additional information about declarations,
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some of which is collected at runtime based on previous analyses.
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We do not inline functions which were not profitable to inline in a different
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context (for example, if the maximum block count was exceeded; see
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"Retry Without Inlining").
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Dynamic Calls and Devirtualization
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----------------------------------
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"Dynamic" calls are those that are resolved at runtime, such as C++ virtual
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method calls and Objective-C message sends. Due to the path-sensitive nature of
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the analysis, the analyzer may be able to reason about the dynamic type of the
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object whose method is being called and thus "devirtualize" the call.
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This path-sensitive devirtualization occurs when the analyzer can determine what
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method would actually be called at runtime. This is possible when the type
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information is constrained enough for a simulated C++/Objective-C object that
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the analyzer can make such a decision.
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== DynamicTypeInfo ==
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As the analyzer analyzes a path, it may accrue information to refine the
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knowledge about the type of an object. This can then be used to make better
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decisions about the target method of a call.
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Such type information is tracked as DynamicTypeInfo. This is path-sensitive
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data that is stored in ProgramState, which defines a mapping from MemRegions to
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an (optional) DynamicTypeInfo.
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If no DynamicTypeInfo has been explicitly set for a MemRegion, it will be lazily
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inferred from the region's type or associated symbol. Information from symbolic
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regions is weaker than from true typed regions.
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EXAMPLE: A C++ object declared "A obj" is known to have the class 'A', but a
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reference "A &ref" may dynamically be a subclass of 'A'.
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The DynamicTypePropagation checker gathers and propagates DynamicTypeInfo,
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updating it as information is observed along a path that can refine that type
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information for a region.
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WARNING: Not all of the existing analyzer code has been retrofitted to use
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DynamicTypeInfo, nor is it universally appropriate. In particular,
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DynamicTypeInfo always applies to a region with all casts stripped
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off, but sometimes the information provided by casts can be useful.
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== RuntimeDefinition ==
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The basis of devirtualization is CallEvent's getRuntimeDefinition() method,
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which returns a RuntimeDefinition object. When asked to provide a definition,
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the CallEvents for dynamic calls will use the DynamicTypeInfo in their
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ProgramState to attempt to devirtualize the call. In the case of no dynamic
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dispatch, or perfectly constrained devirtualization, the resulting
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RuntimeDefinition contains a Decl corresponding to the definition of the called
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function, and RuntimeDefinition::mayHaveOtherDefinitions will return FALSE.
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In the case of dynamic dispatch where our information is not perfect, CallEvent
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can make a guess, but RuntimeDefinition::mayHaveOtherDefinitions will return
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TRUE. The RuntimeDefinition object will then also include a MemRegion
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corresponding to the object being called (i.e., the "receiver" in Objective-C
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parlance), which ExprEngine uses to decide whether or not the call should be
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inlined.
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== Inlining Dynamic Calls ==
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The -analyzer-config ipa option has five different modes: none, basic-inlining,
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inlining, dynamic, and dynamic-bifurcate. Under -analyzer-config ipa=dynamic,
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all dynamic calls are inlined, whether we are certain or not that this will
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actually be the definition used at runtime. Under -analyzer-config ipa=inlining,
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only "near-perfect" devirtualized calls are inlined*, and other dynamic calls
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are evaluated conservatively (as if no definition were available).
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* Currently, no Objective-C messages are not inlined under
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-analyzer-config ipa=inlining, even if we are reasonably confident of the type
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of the receiver. We plan to enable this once we have tested our heuristics
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more thoroughly.
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The last option, -analyzer-config ipa=dynamic-bifurcate, behaves similarly to
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"dynamic", but performs a conservative invalidation in the general virtual case
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in *addition* to inlining. The details of this are discussed below.
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As stated above, -analyzer-config ipa=basic-inlining does not inline any C++
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member functions or Objective-C method calls, even if they are non-virtual or
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can be safely devirtualized.
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Bifurcation
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-----------
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ExprEngine::BifurcateCall implements the -analyzer-config ipa=dynamic-bifurcate
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mode.
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When a call is made on an object with imprecise dynamic type information
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(RuntimeDefinition::mayHaveOtherDefinitions() evaluates to TRUE), ExprEngine
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bifurcates the path and marks the object's region (retrieved from the
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RuntimeDefinition object) with a path-sensitive "mode" in the ProgramState.
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Currently, there are 2 modes:
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DynamicDispatchModeInlined - Models the case where the dynamic type information
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of the receiver (MemoryRegion) is assumed to be perfectly constrained so
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that a given definition of a method is expected to be the code actually
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called. When this mode is set, ExprEngine uses the Decl from
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RuntimeDefinition to inline any dynamically dispatched call sent to this
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receiver because the function definition is considered to be fully resolved.
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DynamicDispatchModeConservative - Models the case where the dynamic type
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information is assumed to be incorrect, for example, implies that the method
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definition is overridden in a subclass. In such cases, ExprEngine does not
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inline the methods sent to the receiver (MemoryRegion), even if a candidate
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definition is available. This mode is conservative about simulating the
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effects of a call.
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Going forward along the symbolic execution path, ExprEngine consults the mode
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of the receiver's MemRegion to make decisions on whether the calls should be
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inlined or not, which ensures that there is at most one split per region.
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At a high level, "bifurcation mode" allows for increased semantic coverage in
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cases where the parent method contains code which is only executed when the
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class is subclassed. The disadvantages of this mode are a (considerable?)
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performance hit and the possibility of false positives on the path where the
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conservative mode is used.
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Objective-C Message Heuristics
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------------------------------
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ExprEngine relies on a set of heuristics to partition the set of Objective-C
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method calls into those that require bifurcation and those that do not. Below
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are the cases when the DynamicTypeInfo of the object is considered precise
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(cannot be a subclass):
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- If the object was created with +alloc or +new and initialized with an -init
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method.
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- If the calls are property accesses using dot syntax. This is based on the
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assumption that children rarely override properties, or do so in an
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essentially compatible way.
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- If the class interface is declared inside the main source file. In this case
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it is unlikely that it will be subclassed.
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- If the method is not declared outside of main source file, either by the
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receiver's class or by any superclasses.
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C++ Caveats
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--------------------
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C++11 [class.cdtor]p4 describes how the vtable of an object is modified as it is
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being constructed or destructed; that is, the type of the object depends on
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which base constructors have been completed. This is tracked using
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DynamicTypeInfo in the DynamicTypePropagation checker.
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There are several limitations in the current implementation:
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- Temporaries are poorly modeled right now because we're not confident in the
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placement of their destructors in the CFG. We currently won't inline their
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constructors unless the destructor is trivial, and don't process their
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destructors at all, not even to invalidate the region.
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- 'new' is poorly modeled due to some nasty CFG/design issues. This is tracked
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in PR12014. 'delete' is not modeled at all.
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- Arrays of objects are modeled very poorly right now. ExprEngine currently
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only simulates the first constructor and first destructor. Because of this,
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ExprEngine does not inline any constructors or destructors for arrays.
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CallEvent
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=========
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A CallEvent represents a specific call to a function, method, or other body of
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code. It is path-sensitive, containing both the current state (ProgramStateRef)
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and stack space (LocationContext), and provides uniform access to the argument
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values and return type of a call, no matter how the call is written in the
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source or what sort of code body is being invoked.
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NOTE: For those familiar with Cocoa, CallEvent is roughly equivalent to
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NSInvocation.
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CallEvent should be used whenever there is logic dealing with function calls
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that does not care how the call occurred.
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Examples include checking that arguments satisfy preconditions (such as
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__attribute__((nonnull))), and attempting to inline a call.
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CallEvents are reference-counted objects managed by a CallEventManager. While
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there is no inherent issue with persisting them (say, in a ProgramState's GDM),
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they are intended for short-lived use, and can be recreated from CFGElements or
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non-top-level StackFrameContexts fairly easily.
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