Summary: public
Using clang's method resolution. This means that, in method calls, clang gives you a pointer to the declaration of the method.
In some cases though, clang doesn't find the right method. For example, when it finds a method in a category, we
need to make it into a method in the corresponding class, because that's how we treat categories in Infer. Moreover,
when it finds a method in a protocol, that is not useful for us, since the implementation will be in some class. Finally,
sometimes the call is on an object of type id, in which case clang doesn't know what is the correct declaration. In
those cases, we fall back to what we were doing before of approximating the method resolution. We also refactor
some of the code.
Reviewed By: akotulski
Differential Revision: D2679766
fb-gh-sync-id: b79bb85
Summary:
each procedure has a different scope, so we can restart the fresh name generator and have more stable instructions in the cfg, that don't change when other procedures are changed
Summary:
@public
The clang location information is described in an incremental way: each location information is a delta with respect to the previous one in the AST. This is based on a the visit of the AST nodes which corresponds to the order in which the lines are printed with the standard clang AST dump:
clang -cc1 -ast-dump filename.c
This diff adds a preprocessing phase to the front-end so that location information is composed during a visit, and explicit location information is used instead.
In the case of include files, we report the last known location before including the file.
The current file for a function is the file where it is defined. So if a function is entirely defined in a .h file, then the location information will consistently be about the .h file. If instead a function is defined in the source file being analyzed, and some AST nodes come from macro expansion, line information will refer to the original file.
The front-end tests reveal that the location information was incorrect in a few dot files.
Test Plan: arc unit, after having fixed the wrong location in the existing .dot files