Summary:
Add warning 60 (unused module) to the list of fatal warnings. Whitelisting
modules at toplevel is tricky (see inline comments) but doable.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7790073
fbshipit-source-id: 6f591c4
Summary:
Limit the scope of what gets included into IStd.ml to only values that we want
to shadow. New values go into other files.
Also, build istd/ with `Core` open.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7382111
fbshipit-source-id: 969f0e8
Summary:
Upgrade ocamlformat to 0.3, and (necessarily) base to v0.10.0.
- Fix accumulated mis-formatting
- Update opam.lock to unbreak clean build
- Update to base v0.10.0
- Update opam.lock for base
- Update offline opam repo
- Everyone should already have removed their ocamlformat pin
- ocamlformat 0.3 supports output to stdout natively
- bump version of ocamlformat
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D6636741
fbshipit-source-id: 41a56a8
Summary:
Install ocamlformat from github as part of `make devsetup`, and use it
for formatting OCaml (and jbuild) code.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D6092464
fbshipit-source-id: 4ba0845
Summary:
Expanding traces currently works in the following way:
Given a `TraceElem.Kind` `k` we want to report in `foo`, we look for a callee `C` of `foo` that has a `TraceElem.Kind` equal to `k` in its summary, grab the summary for `C`, then repeat until we bottom out.
This isn't very flexible: it insists on equality between `TraceElem.Kind`'s as the criteria for expanding a trace.
This diff introduces a new `matches` function for deciding when to expand a trace from a caller into a callee.
Clients that don't want strict equality can implement a fuzzier kind of equality inside this function.
I've gone ahead and done this for the trace elemes of thread-safety.
In the near future, equivalent access paths won't always compare equal from caller to callee, so we want to match their suffixes instead.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D5914118
fbshipit-source-id: 233c603
Summary:
The previous domain for SIOF was duplicating some work with the generic Trace
domain, and basically was a bit confused and confusing. A sink was a set of
global accesses, and a state contains a set of sinks. Then the checker has to
needlessly jump through hoops to normalize this set of sets of accesses into a
set of accesses.
The new domain has one sink = one access, as suggested by sblackshear. This simplifies
a few things, and makes the dedup logic much easier: just grab the first report
of the list of reports for a function.
We only report on the fake procedures generated to initialise a global, and the
filtering means that we keep only one report per global.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5932138
fbshipit-source-id: acb7285
Summary:
Conversion and reformat of infer source using ocamlformat
auto-formatting tool.
Current status:
- Because Reason does not handle docstrings, the output of the
conversion is not 'Warning 50'-clean, meaning that there are
docstrings with ambiguous placement. I'll need to manually fix
them just before landing.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D5225546
fbshipit-source-id: 3bd2786
Summary:
First step toward addressing bad traces that happen in examples like
```
void sourceMethod() {
Obj source = (Obj) InferTaint.inferSecretSource();
callSameSink(null, source); // index: 1
}
void callSameSink(Obj o1, Obj o2) {
callMySink1(o1); // flows via o1 ~= index 0, don't expand
callMySink2(o2); // flows via o2 ~= index 1, can expand
}
void callMySink1(Obj o) {
... // maybe interesting something happens here that doesn't happen in callMySink2
InferTaint.inferSensitiveSink(o); // flows via o ~= index 0, can expand
}
void callMySink2(Obj o) {
InferTaint.inferSensitiveSink(o); // flows via o ~= index 0, can expand
}
```
The issue is that when we recreate a trace to the sink starting from `sourceMethod`, we don't know which of the calls to `callMySink` to expand/include in the trace.
If we expand the call to `callMySink(o1)`, we'll get a bogus trace.
In this example that's not such a big deal, but imagine the case where the first call to `callMySink` is a different function that transitively calls the sink through some long and confusing path.
Remembering the index at which taint flows into each sink will let us choose which sinks are safe to expand.
This diff just adds indexes to the API; it's not actually propagating the index info or using it during expansion yet.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5170563
fbshipit-source-id: ba4b096
Summary:
Limit the use of `SourceFile.invalid` (renamed from `SourceFile.empty`) as much
as possible. In particular, do not generate bogus procnames for external global
variables: their translation unit was set to the invalid source file, now we
distinguish between extern/non-extern global variables more explicitly.
`SourceFile.invalid` is still used in too many places to actually remove it, often as a dummy initial value that never gets used, but sometimes as an actual value... Worse, we cannot fail on all operations on `SourceFile.Invalid` yet: the `SourceFile.to_string` method is used in too many places where it could get `SourceFile.Invalid` as argument. It's easy to see where it's used by making it raise in the code, then running the tests. This results in spaghetti backtraces that are hard to trace back to a root cause.
Reviewed By: akotulski, jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D4860019
fbshipit-source-id: 45be040
Summary: Being forced to separately define `pp_element`/`pp_key` is uneccessary and makes it more cumbersome to create a set/map from an existing module that already defines `pp`.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D4517308
fbshipit-source-id: 9b17c9c
Summary:
Change the domain of SIOF to be based on sets of pvar * location instead of
single pvars. This allows us to group several accesses together. However, we
still get different trace elems for different instructions in a proc. We do two
things to get around this limitation and get a trace where all accesses within
the same proc are grouped together, instead of one trace for each access:
1. A post-processing phase at the end of the analysis of one proc collects all
the globals directly accessed in the proc into a single trace elem.
2. When creating the error trace, unpack this set into several trace elements
to see each access (at its correct location) separately in the trace.
This is a bit hacky and another way would be to extend the API of traces to
handle in-procedure accesses natively instead of shoe-horning them. However
since SIOF is the only one to use this, it introduces less boilerplate to do it
that way for now.
Also, a few .mlis for good measure.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D4299070
fbshipit-source-id: 3bbb5c2
Summary:
Utils contains definitions intended to be in the global namespace for
all of the infer code-base, as well as pretty-printing functions, and
assorted utility functions mostly for dealing with files and processes.
This diff changes the module opened into the global namespace to
IStd (Std conflict with extlib), and moves the pretty-printing
definitions from Utils to Pp.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D4232457
fbshipit-source-id: 1e070e0
Summary:
This adds generic support for reporting error traces as usual infer issues
traces (instead of putting them in the textual description of the error) to
Trace.ml and SinkTrace.ml.
The siof checker is made to use these new traces, and gets an improved error
message mentioning the name of the problematic global as well, which requires a
slight API change in Pvar.re.
The support in Trace.ml is incomplete: passthroughs are ignored. This missing
feature will be needed by Quandary to migrate its error messages.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D4159542
fbshipit-source-id: 8c1101d
Summary:
There's not really a concept of callee here, so s/callee/callsite/, and "to"
suggests we get the callee whereas we update it, so s/to/with/.
Feel free to bikeshed further.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D4153426
fbshipit-source-id: 6ea762c
Summary:
The Quandary-style traces are too general for checkers like SIOF.
This diff adds a "suffix abstraction" of the trace for analyses that just care about sinks.
To show how to use it, we add it to SIOF.
Note: this diff converts the domain, but isn't actually doing the fancier reporting yet.
That will come in a future diff.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D4124881
fbshipit-source-id: 5b9fd07
Summary:
The Quandary-style traces are too general for checkers like SIOF.
This diff adds a "suffix abstraction" of the trace for analyses that just care about sinks.
To show how to use it, we add it to SIOF.
Note: this diff converts the domain, but isn't actually doing the fancier reporting yet.
That will come in a future diff.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D4117393
fbshipit-source-id: e473665