top level.
This heuristic is already turned on for non-ObjC methods
(inlining-mode=noredundancy). If a method has been previously analyzed,
while being inlined inside of another method, do not reanalyze it as top
level.
This commit applies it to ObjCMethods as well. The main caveat here is
that to catch the retain release errors, we are still going to reanalyze
all the ObjC methods but without inlining turned on.
Gives 21% performance increase on one heavy ObjC benchmark, which
suffered large performance regressions due to ObjC inlining.
llvm-svn: 169639
This is the case where the analyzer tries to print out source locations
for code within a synthesized function body, which of course does not have
a valid source location. The previous fix attempted to do this during
diagnostic path pruning, but some diagnostics have pruning disabled, and
so any diagnostic with a path that goes through a synthesized body will
either hit an assertion or emit invalid output.
<rdar://problem/12657843> (again)
llvm-svn: 169631
This reduces analysis time by 1.2% on one test case (Objective-C), but
also cleans up some of the code conceptually as well. We can possible
just make RegionBindingsRef -> RegionBindings, but I wanted to stage
things.
After this, we should revisit Jordan's optimization of not canonicalizing
the immutable AVL trees for the cluster bindings as well.
llvm-svn: 169571
Previously we would search for the last statement, then back up to the
entrance of the block that contained that statement. Now, while we're
scanning for the statement, we just keep track of which blocks are being
exited (in reverse order).
llvm-svn: 169526
This doesn't seem to make much of a difference in practice, but it does
have the potential to avoid a trip through the constraint manager.
llvm-svn: 169524
Whenever we touch a single bindings cluster multiple times, we can delay
canonicalizing it until the final access. This has some interesting
implications, in particular that we shouldn't remove an /empty/ cluster
from the top-level map until canonicalization.
This is good for a 2% speedup or so on the test case in
<rdar://problem/12810842>
llvm-svn: 169523
This feature was probably intended to improve diagnostics, but was currently
only used when dumping the Environment. It shows what location a given value
was loaded from, e.g. when evaluating an LValueToRValue cast.
llvm-svn: 169522
uncovered.
This required manually correcting all of the incorrect main-module
headers I could find, and running the new llvm/utils/sort_includes.py
script over the files.
I also manually added quite a few missing headers that were uncovered by
shuffling the order or moving headers up to be main-module-headers.
llvm-svn: 169237
The stop-gap here is to just drop such objects when processing the InitListExpr.
We still need a better solution.
Fixes <rdar://problem/12755044>.
llvm-svn: 168757
This was also covered by <rdar://problem/12753384>. The static analyzer
evaluates a CXXConstructExpr within an initializer expression and
RegionStore doesn't know how to handle the resulting CXXTempObjectRegion
that gets created. We need a better solution than just dropping the
value, but we need to better understand how to implement the right
semantics here.
Thanks to Jordan for his help diagnosing the behavior here.
llvm-svn: 168741
The AllocaRegion did not have the superRegion (based on LocationContext)
as part of it's hash. As a consequence, the AllocaRegions from
different frames were uniqued to be the same region.
llvm-svn: 168599
In code like this:
void foo() {
bar();
baz();
}
...the location for the call to 'bar()' was being used as a backup location
for the call to 'baz()'. This is fine unless the call to 'bar()' is deemed
uninteresting and that part of the path deleted.
(This looks like a logic error as well, but in practice the only way 'baz()'
could have an invalid location is if the entire body of 'foo()' is
synthesized, meaning the call to 'bar()' will be using the location of the
call to 'foo()' anyway. Nevertheless, the new version better matches the
intent of the code.)
Found by Matt Beaumont-Gay using ASan. Thanks, Matt!
llvm-svn: 168080
This fixes a few cases where we'd emit path notes like this:
+---+
1| v
p = malloc(len);
^ |2
+---+
In general this should make path notes more consistent and more correct,
especially in cases where the leak happens on the false branch of an if
that jumps directly to the end of the function. There are a couple places
where the leak is reported farther away from the cause; these are usually
cases where there are several levels of nested braces before the end of
the function. This still matches our current behavior for when there /is/
a statement after all the braces, though.
llvm-svn: 168070
This allows us to properly remove dead bindings at the end of the top-level
stack frame, using the ReturnStmt, if there is one, to keep the return value
live. This in turn removes the need for a check::EndPath callback in leak
checkers.
This does cause some changes in the path notes for leak checkers. Previously,
a leak would be reported at the location of the closing brace in a function.
Now, it gets reported at the last statement. This matches the way leaks are
currently reported for inlined functions, but is less than ideal for both.
llvm-svn: 168066
We do this by using the "most recent" good location: if a synthesized
function 'A' calls another function 'B', the path notes for the call to 'B'
will be placed at the same location as the path note for calling 'A'.
Similarly, the call to 'A' will have a note saying "Entered call from...",
and now we just don't emit that (since the user doesn't have a body to look
at anyway).
Previously, we were doing this for the "Calling..." notes, but not for the
"Entered call from..." or "Returning to caller". This caused a crash when
the path entered and then exiting a call within a synthesized body.
<rdar://problem/12657843>
llvm-svn: 168019
conditions.
The adjustment is needed only in case of dynamic dispatch performed by
the analyzer - when the runtime declaration is different from the static
one.
Document this explicitly in the code (by adding a helper). Also, use
canonical Decls to avoid matching against the case where the definition
is different from found declaration.
This fix suppresses the testcase I added in r167762, so add another
testcase to make sure we do test commit r167762.
llvm-svn: 167780
Suppresses a leak false positive (radar://12663777).
In addition, we'll need to rewrite the adjustReturnValue() method not to
return UnknownVal by default, but rather assert in cases we cannot
handle. To make it possible, we need to correctly handle some of the
edge cases we already know about.
llvm-svn: 167762
Previously, RegionStore was being VERY conservative in saying that because
p[i].x and p[i].y have a concrete base region of 'p', they might overlap.
Now, we check the chain of fields back up to the base object and check if
they match.
This only kicks in when dealing with symbolic offset regions because
RegionStore's "base+offset" representation of concrete offset regions loses
all information about fields. In cases where all offsets are concrete
(s.x and s.y), RegionStore will already do the right thing, but mixing
concrete and symbolic offsets can cause bindings to be invalidated that
are known to not overlap (e.g. p[0].x and p[i].y).
This additional refinement is tracked by <rdar://problem/12676180>.
<rdar://problem/12530149>
llvm-svn: 167654
As Anna pointed out, ProgramStateTrait.h is a relatively obscure header,
and checker writers may not know to look there to add their own custom
state.
The base macro that specializes the template remains in ProgramStateTrait.h
(REGISTER_TRAIT_WITH_PROGRAMSTATE), which allows the analyzer core to keep
using it.
llvm-svn: 167385
This will simplify checkers that need to register for leaks. Currently,
they have to register for both: check dead and check end of path.
I've modified the SymbolReaper to consider everything on the stack dead
if the input StackLocationContext is 0.
(This is a bit disruptive, so I'd like to flash out all the issues
asap.)
llvm-svn: 167352
These are CallEvent-equivalents of helpers already accessible in
CheckerContext, as part of making it easier for new checkers to be written
using CallEvent rather than raw CallExprs.
llvm-svn: 167338
Also, move the REGISTER_*_WITH_PROGRAMSTATE macros to ProgramStateTrait.h.
This doesn't get rid of /all/ explicit uses of ProgramStatePartialTrait,
but it does get a lot of them.
llvm-svn: 167276
Previously, every call to a ConstraintManager's isNull would do a full
assumeDual to test feasibility. Now, ConstraintManagers can override
checkNull if they have a cheaper way to do the same thing.
RangeConstraintManager can do this in less than half the work.
<rdar://problem/12608209>
llvm-svn: 167138
Our one basic suppression heuristic is to assume that functions do not
usually return NULL. However, when one of the arguments is NULL it is
suddenly much more likely that NULL is a valid return value. In this case,
we don't suppress the report here, but we do attach /another/ visitor to
go find out if this NULL argument also comes from an inlined function's
error path.
This new behavior, controlled by the 'avoid-suppressing-null-argument-paths'
analyzer-config option, is turned off by default. Turning it on produced
two false positives and no new true positives when running over LLVM/Clang.
This is one of the possible refinements to our suppression heuristics.
<rdar://problem/12350829>
llvm-svn: 166941
Additionally, don't collect PostStore nodes -- they are often used in
path diagnostics.
Previously, we tried to track null arguments in the same way as any other
null values, but in many cases the necessary nodes had already been
collected (a memory optimization in ExplodedGraph). Now, we fall back to
using the value of the argument at the time of the call, which may not
always match the actual contents of the region, but often will.
This is a precursor to improving our suppression heuristic.
<rdar://problem/12350829>
llvm-svn: 166940
path notes for cases where a value may be assumed to be null, etc.
Instead of having redundant diagnostics, do a pass over the generated
PathDiagnostic pieces and remove notes from TrackConstraintBRVisitor
that are already covered by ConditionBRVisitor, whose notes tend
to be better.
Fixes <rdar://problem/12252783>
llvm-svn: 166728
After every 1000 CFGElements processed, the ExplodedGraph trims out nodes
that satisfy a number of criteria for being "boring" (single predecessor,
single successor, and more). Rather than controlling this with a cc1 option,
which can only disable this behavior, we now have an analyzer-config option,
'graph-trim-interval', which can change this interval from 1000 to something
else. Setting the value to 0 disables reclamation.
The next commit relies on this behavior to actually test anything.
llvm-svn: 166528
This is actually required by the C++ standard in
[basic.stc.dynamic.allocation]p3:
If an allocation function declared with a non-throwing
exception-specification fails to allocate storage, it shall return a
null pointer. Any other allocation function that fails to allocate
storage shall indicate failure only by throwing an exception of a type
that would match a handler of type std::bad_alloc.
We don't bother checking for the specific exception type, but just go off
the operator new prototype. This should help with a certain class of lazy
initalization false positives.
<rdar://problem/12115221>
llvm-svn: 166363
This actually looks through several kinds of expression, such as
OpaqueValueExpr and ExprWithCleanups. The idea is that binding and lookup
should be consistent, and so if the environment needs to be modified later,
the code doing the modification will not have to manually look through these
"transparent" expressions to find the real binding to change.
This is necessary for proper updating of struct rvalues as described in
the previous commit.
llvm-svn: 166121
In C++, rvalues that need to have their address taken (for example, to be
passed to a function by const reference) will be wrapped in a
MaterializeTemporaryExpr, which lets CodeGen know to create a temporary
region to store this value. However, MaterializeTemporaryExprs are /not/
created when a method is called on an rvalue struct, even though the 'this'
pointer needs a valid value. CodeGen works around this by creating a
temporary region anyway; now, so does the analyzer.
The analyzer also does this when accessing a field of a struct rvalue.
This is a little unfortunate, since the rest of the struct will soon be
thrown away, but it does make things consistent with the rest of the
analyzer.
This allows us to bring back the assumption that all known 'this' values
are Locs. This is a revised version of r164828-9, reverted in r164876-7.
<rdar://problem/12137950>
llvm-svn: 166120
This was only used by OSAtomicChecker and makes it more
difficult to update values for expressions that the environment
may look through instead (it's not the same as IgnoreParens).
With this gone, we can have bindExpr bind to the inner
expression that getSVal will find.
Groundwork for <rdar://problem/12137950>
llvm-svn: 165866
I believe the removed assert in CheckerManager says it best:
InlineCall is a special hacky callback to allow intrusive
evaluation of the call (which simulates inlining). It is
currently only used by OSAtomicChecker and should go away
at some point.
OSAtomicChecker has gone away; inlineCall can now go away as well!
llvm-svn: 165865
This time, actually uncomment the code that's supposed to fix the problem.
This reverts r165671 / 8ceb837585ed973dc36fba8dfc57ef60fc8f2735.
llvm-svn: 165676
Author: Jordan Rose <jordan_rose@apple.com>
Date: Wed Oct 10 21:31:21 2012 +0000
[analyzer] Treat fields of unions as having symbolic offsets.
This allows only one field to be active at a time in RegionStore.
This isn't quite the correct behavior for unions, but it at least
would handle the case of "value goes in, value comes out" from the
same field.
RegionStore currently has a number of places where any access to a union
results in UnknownVal being returned. However, it is clearly missing
some cases, or the original issue wouldn't have occurred. It is probably
now safe to remove those changes, but that's a potentially destabilizing
change that should wait for more thorough testing.
Fixes PR14054.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk@165660 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This reverts commit cf9030e480f77ab349672f00ad302e216c26c92c.
llvm-svn: 165671
This allows only one field to be active at a time in RegionStore.
This isn't quite the correct behavior for unions, but it at least
would handle the case of "value goes in, value comes out" from the
same field.
RegionStore currently has a number of places where any access to a union
results in UnknownVal being returned. However, it is clearly missing
some cases, or the original issue wouldn't have occurred. It is probably
now safe to remove those changes, but that's a potentially destabilizing
change that should wait for more thorough testing.
Fixes PR14054.
llvm-svn: 165660
Some implicit statements, such as the implicit 'self' inserted for "free"
Objective-C ivar access, have invalid source locations. If one of these
statements is the location where an issue is reported, we'll now look at
the enclosing statements for a valid source location.
<rdar://problem/12446776>
llvm-svn: 165354
In C++, overriding virtual methods are allowed to specify a covariant
return type -- that is, if the return type of the base method is an
object pointer type (or reference type), the overriding method's return
type can be a pointer to a subclass of the original type. The analyzer
was failing to take this into account when devirtualizing a method call,
and anything that relied on the return value having the proper type later
would crash.
In Objective-C, overriding methods are allowed to specify ANY return type,
meaning we can NEVER be sure that devirtualizing will give us a "safe"
return value. Of course, a program that does this will most likely crash
at runtime, but the analyzer at least shouldn't crash.
The solution is to check and see if the function/method being inlined is
the function that static binding would have picked. If not, check that
the return value has the same type. If the types don't match, see if we
can fix it with a derived-to-base cast (the C++ case). If we can't,
return UnknownVal to avoid crashing later.
<rdar://problem/12409977>
llvm-svn: 165079
These functions are store-agnostic, and would benefit from information in
DynamicTypeInfo but gain nothing from the store type.
No intended functionality change.
llvm-svn: 165078
table, making it printable with the ConfigDump checker. Along the
way, fix a really serious bug where the value was getting parsed
from the string in code that was in an assert() call. This means
in a Release-Asserts build this code wouldn't work as expected.
llvm-svn: 165041
By analogy with C structs, this seems to be legal, if probably discouraged.
It's only if the ivar is read from or written to that there's a problem.
Running a program that gets the "address" of an instance variable does in
fact return the offset when the base "object" is nil.
This isn't a full revert because r164442 includes some diagnostic tweaks
as well; those have been kept.
This partially reverts r164442 / 08965091770c9b276c238bac2f716eaa4da2dca4.
llvm-svn: 164960
The original intent of this commit was to catch potential null dereferences
early, but it breaks the common "home-grown offsetof" idiom (PR13927):
(((struct Foo *)0)->member - ((struct foo *)0))
As it turns out, this appears to be legal in C, per a footnote in
C11 6.5.3.2: "Thus, &*E is equivalent to E (even if E is a null pointer)".
In C++ this issue is still open:
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_active.html#232
We'll just have to make sure we have good path notes in the future.
This reverts r164441 / 9be016dcd1ca3986873a7b66bd4bc027309ceb59.
llvm-svn: 164958
string in the config table so that it can be dumped as part of the
config dumper. Add a test to show that these options are sticking
and can be cross-checked using FileCheck.
llvm-svn: 164954
This is related to but not blocked by <rdar://problem/12137950>
("Return-by-value structs do not have associated regions")
This reverts r164875 / 3278d41e17749dbedb204a81ef373499f10251d7.
llvm-svn: 164952
It is possible and valid to have a state manager and associated objects
without having a SubEngine or checkers.
Patch by Olaf Krzikalla!
llvm-svn: 164947
Previously the analyzer treated all inlined constructors like lvalues,
setting the value of the CXXConstructExpr to the newly-constructed
region. However, some CXXConstructExprs behave like rvalues -- in
particular, the implicit copy constructor into a pass-by-value argument.
In this case, we want only the /contents/ of a temporary object to be
passed, so that we can use the same "copy each argument into the
parameter region" algorithm that we use for scalar arguments.
This may change when we start modeling destructors of temporaries,
but for now this is the last part of <rdar://problem/12137950>.
llvm-svn: 164830
An rvalue has no address, but calling a C++ member function requires a
'this' pointer. This commit makes the analyzer create a temporary region
in which to store the struct rvalue and use as a 'this' pointer whenever
a member function is called on an rvalue, which is essentially what
CodeGen does.
More of <rdar://problem/12137950>. The last part is tracking down the
C++ FIXME in array-struct-region.cpp.
llvm-svn: 164829
Struct rvalues are represented in the analyzer by CompoundVals,
LazyCompoundVals, or plain ConjuredSymbols -- none of which have associated
regions. If the entire structure is going to persist, this is not a
problem -- either the rvalue will be assigned to an existing region, or
a MaterializeTemporaryExpr will be present to create a temporary region.
However, if we just need a field from the struct, we need to create the
temporary region ourselves.
This is inspired by the way CodeGen handles calls to temporaries;
support for that in the analyzer is coming next.
Part of <rdar://problem/12137950>
llvm-svn: 164828
Previously, we'd just keep constraints around forever, which means we'd
never be able to merge paths that differed only in constraints on dead
symbols.
Because we now allow constraints on symbolic expressions, not just single
symbols, this requires changing SymExpr::symbol_iterator to include
intermediate symbol nodes in its traversal, not just the SymbolData leaf
nodes.
This depends on the previous commit to be correct. Originally applied in
r163444, reverted in r164275, now being re-applied.
llvm-svn: 164622
No tests, but this allows the optimization of removing dead constraints.
We can then add tests that we don't do this prematurely.
<rdar://problem/12333297>
Note: the added FIXME to investigate SymbolRegionValue liveness is
tracked by <rdar://problem/12368183>. This patch does not change the
existing behavior.
llvm-svn: 164621
This is a heuristic intended to greatly reduce the number of false
positives resulting from inlining, particularly inlining of generic,
defensive C++ methods that live in header files. The suppression is
triggered in the cases where we ask to track where a null pointer came
from, and it turns out that the source of the null pointer was an inlined
function call.
This change brings the number of bug reports in LLVM from ~1500 down to
around ~300, a much more manageable number. Yes, some true positives may
be hidden as well, but from what I looked at the vast majority of silenced
reports are false positives, and many of the true issues found by the
analyzer are still reported.
I'm hoping to improve this heuristic further by adding some exceptions
next week (cases in which a bug should still be reported).
llvm-svn: 164449
Before, PathDiagnosticConsumers that did not support actual path output
would (sensibly) cause the generation of the full path to be skipped.
However, BugReporterVisitors may want to see the path in order to mark a
BugReport as invalid.
Now, even for a path generation scheme of 'None' we will still create a
trimmed graph and walk backwards through the bug path, doing no work other
than passing the nodes to the BugReporterVisitors. This isn't cheap, but
it's necessary to properly do suppression when the first path consumer does
not support path notes.
In the future, we should try only generating the path and visitor-provided
path notes once, or at least only creating the trimmed graph once.
llvm-svn: 164447
This is intended to allow visitors to make decisions about whether a
BugReport is likely a false positive. Currently there are no visitors
making use of this feature, so there are no tests.
When a BugReport is marked invalid, the invalidator must provide a key
that identifies the invaliation (intended to be the visitor type and a
context pointer of some kind). This allows us to reverse the decision
later on. Being able to reverse a decision about invalidation gives us more
flexibility, and allows us to formulate conditions like "this report is
invalid UNLESS the original argument is 'foo'". We can use this to
fine-tune our false-positive suppression (coming soon).
llvm-svn: 164446
Rather than saying "Null pointer value stored to 'foo'", we now say
"Passing null pointer value via Nth parameter 'foo'", which is much better.
The note is also now on the argument expression as well, rather than the
entire call.
This paves the way for continuing to track arguments back to their sources.
<rdar://problem/12211490>
llvm-svn: 164444
Like with struct fields, we want to catch cases like this early,
so that we can produce better diagnostics and path notes:
PointObj *p = nil;
int *px = &p->_x; // should warn here
*px = 1;
llvm-svn: 164442
We want to catch cases like this early, so that we can produce better
diagnostics and path notes:
Point *p = 0;
int *px = &p->x; // should warn here
*px = 1;
llvm-svn: 164441
their implementations are unavailable. Start by simulating dispatch_sync().
This change is largely a bunch of plumbing around something very simple. We
use AnalysisDeclContext to conjure up a fake function body (using the
current ASTContext) when one does not exist. This is controlled
under the analyzer-config option "faux-bodies", which is off by default.
The plumbing in this patch is largely to pass the necessary machinery
around. CallEvent needs the AnalysisDeclContextManager to get
the function definition, as one may get conjured up lazily.
BugReporter and PathDiagnosticLocation needed to be relaxed to handle
invalid locations, as the conjured body has no real source locations.
We do some primitive recovery in diagnostic generation to generate
some reasonable locations (for arrows and events), but it can be
improved.
llvm-svn: 164339
While we definitely want this optimization in the future, we're not
currently handling constraints on symbolic /expressions/ correctly.
These should stay live even if the SymExpr itself is no longer referenced
because could recreate an identical SymExpr later. Only once the SymExpr
can no longer be recreated -- i.e. a component symbol is dead -- can we
safely remove the constraints on it.
This liveness issue is tracked by <rdar://problem/12333297>.
This reverts r163444 / 24c7f98828e039005cff3bd847e7ab404a6a09f8.
llvm-svn: 164275