Summary: This option makes RacerD angelic wrt the ownership of returned objects from procedures without summary. This will now be made the default and the option deprecated up the diff stack.
Reviewed By: dulmarod
Differential Revision: D21174676
fbshipit-source-id: 9c48d3d7d
Summary: The flags `--biabduction-fallback-model-alloc-pattern` and `--biabduction-fallback-model-free-pattern` were unused because we removed the models from .inferconfig a while ago because of too many false positives. We are implementing a better memory leak check based on Pulse, and are adding the similar flags `--pulse-model-alloc-pattern` and `--pulse-model-free-pattern`.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D21061511
fbshipit-source-id: 1b3476c22
Summary:
This diff limits the depth of abstract location by a constant.
problem: Inferbo generated too many of abstract locations, especially when struct types had many pointer fields and Inferbo was not able to analyze the objects precisely. Since the number of generated abstract locations were exponential to the number of fields, it resulted in OOM in the end.
(reported by zyh1121 in https://github.com/facebook/infer/issues/1246)
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D20818471
fbshipit-source-id: f8af27e5c
Summary:
It's easy to create large arrays in code, eg `int x[1UL << 16];`, but
these can generate huge nodes in SIL because zero-initialization is
translated by zero-ing structures element by element. Introduce a
builtin to use instead. Keep the naive method for small structures (with
a configurable limit on "small").
Reviewed By: dulmarod
Differential Revision: D20836836
fbshipit-source-id: 6bf5410f8
Summary:
The documentation of `--quiet` dates back from when it applied only to
`InferPrint.ml`. Make it more general and more in line with
expectations one might have about a `--quiet` option:
- change the doc
- make it disable the progress bar
Reviewed By: ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D20626110
fbshipit-source-id: db096fd31
Summary:
This was never quite finished and inferbo has a new way to do sort of
the same thing.
Reviewed By: skcho, ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D20362619
fbshipit-source-id: 7c7935d47
Summary:
The goals are to have all the checker definitions and documentation in one
place (except how to actually run them, since that's not quite the same
concept; for example inferbo is one checker but several analyses depend on its
symbolic execution), and later on to be able to link issues reported by infer
back to the checker that generated them.
This makes apparent that the documentation of our checkers is lacking,
not touching that in this diff.
Not sure if "analysis" would be a better name than "checker" at this
point? For instance "Linters" is one of the checkers, which historically
at least we have not considered to be the case.
Reviewed By: mityal
Differential Revision: D20252386
fbshipit-source-id: fc611bfb7
Summary:
These were not used (and were actually activated byt the same config
param). They both are in experimental stage that never reached maturity.
Since the team does not have immediate plans to work on ObjC nullability
checker; and since "eradicate" (now known as nullsafe) is the main
solution for Java, removing it is sensible.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D20279866
fbshipit-source-id: 79e64992b
Summary:
The `--continue-analysis` option enables continuing analysis after more targets are captured by
`--continue`. For example,
```
$ infer capture -- buck build tgt1
$ infer analyze --merge
$ infer capture --continue -- bucck build tgt2
$ infer analyze --merge --continue-analyze
```
In the last analysis, it reuses the analysis results of `tgt1` from the previous analysis. If
`tgt1` and `tgt2` have a same dependency to a library, the analysis results of the library is also
reused.
Reviewed By: dulmarod
Differential Revision: D19996598
fbshipit-source-id: bb6874a6f
Summary:
This diff adds a taint domain in Inferbo. The taint value will be used to find vulnerable array
accesses in the following diffs.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D19391028
fbshipit-source-id: 566b4c0fe
Summary: Add command line option that directs racerd to treat all return values from unknown code (including abstract methods) as owned objects. This is essentially treating return values with full angelicism
Reviewed By: artempyanykh
Differential Revision: D19368375
fbshipit-source-id: 6a10153fa
Summary:
This changes how we select amongst our (currently) 4 Buck integrations
for Java and clang, as well as how the user's choice is reflected by the
Config module.
The old command line interface is still supported but is now deprecated.
The changes in how to select each integration are:
- clang via "flavors", activated with `--flavors`, now with `--buck-clang`
- clang via "compilation DB", activated with `--buck-compilation-database`, unchanged
- Java via "genrule", activated with `--genrule-master-mode`, now with `--buck-java`
- Java "without genrules", used to be activated by *not specifying any other Buck mode*, unchanged
Instead of various `Config` flags corresponding to the previous CLI that
are allowed in any combination of `flavors`,
`buck_compilation_database`, `genrule_master_mode`, `Config` now exposes
a single `buck_mode` datatype. This allows, eg, `flavors` to override
`buck_compilation_database` if needed. It will also make it easier to
get rid of the old "Java without genrules" integration in a later diff
(see inline comments).
Reviewed By: ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D19175686
fbshipit-source-id: 29b3831be
Summary:
Inferbo does not use the external relational domains, apron and elina. At some point, the parts of
inferbo using them were broken and they do not seem to be fixed easily in the near future. Let's
remove them and keep the code base cleaner.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D19022905
fbshipit-source-id: e0eafe79f
Summary: It is not used anywhere and there are no plans to revive it. Kill it!
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D18934719
fbshipit-source-id: b9b069b96
Summary: `litho` checker contained two checkers: required-props and graphQL field accesses. Although they use the same domain, their reporting conditions and analysis details are different. However, they were bundled into the same analysis by adding disjunctions to `exec_instr` to handle both cases. Let's separate them into two different checkers, keeping a modular transfer function and analyzer that is reused by these two checkers.
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D17788834
fbshipit-source-id: 47d77063b
Summary:
The documentation and uses of filtering disagree. One typical usage is deduplication.
Split that where obvious, add comments where not obvious, and leave alone when obviously unrelated to deduplication.
Reviewed By: mityal
Differential Revision: D17715329
fbshipit-source-id: ec757927b
Summary:
Introduce a new experimental checker (`--impurity`) that detects
impurity information, tracking which parameters and global variables
of a function are modified. The checker relies on Pulse to detect how
the state changes: it traverses the pre and post pairs starting from
the parameter/global variable and finds where the pre and post heaps
diverge. At diversion points, we expect to see WrittenTo/Invalid attributes
containing a trace of how the address was modified. We use these to
construct the trace of impurity.
This checker is a complement to the purity checker that exists mainly
for Java (and used for cost and loop-hoisting analyses). The aim of
this new experimental checker is to rely on Pulse's precise
memory treatment and come up with a more precise im(purity)
analysis. To distinguish the two checkers, we introduce a new issue
type `IMPURE_FUNCTION` that reports when a function is impure, rather
than when it is pure (as in the purity checker).
TODO:
- improve the analysis to rely on impurity information of external
library calls. Currently, all library calls are assumed to be nops,
hence pure.
- de-entangle Pulse reporting from analysis.
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D17051567
fbshipit-source-id: 5e10afb4f
Summary:
Sqlite versions set their own default page and cache size. Old versions use crazy-non-optimal settings.
Allow setting both from command line and set up reasonable defaults. See, e.g.,
https://wiki.mozilla.org/Performance/Avoid_SQLite_In_Your_Next_Firefox_Feature
for page size notes.
The defaults will cost a maximum of 64Mb in cache per Infer process. These improve merging times significantly.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D17364643
fbshipit-source-id: b9abab10f
Summary:
I found it very confusing that running infer with --debug makes the
report to be different.
Intuitively, I expect (and I think majority of users would expect) that
`--debug` makes things more verbose (and potentially more slow / consuming
more memory and disk space), but does not change anything apart from it.
One pro of preserving existing behavior, pointed by jvillard:
- Suppose some check is experimental or disabled in the config. The
users expect the issue to be found, but it does not show up. They run
`infer --debug` to understand the behavior, and suddenly the issue shows
up.
I, hovewer, find this pro not important enough and potentially confusing
the users even more.
(If they want to investigate seriously, they can always use
--no-filtering, and there are a lot of cases when the issue does not
show up for others, much hard to undertand reasons, than the fact that
it is disabled).
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D17113750
fbshipit-source-id: 46cc93503
Summary:
This is more powerful than `"symbols"` for more advanced use-cases. Keep
`"symbols"` unchanged to make migrating easier.
Differential Revision: D16985756
fbshipit-source-id: dfbb09393
Summary:
These have proved to be too fragile to maintain as they would often break
compilation of user code. They have been off by default for more than a year
now (D7350715).
Removing the include models shows a more accurate picture of what infer results
look like in production. As such, lots of tests have changed, mostly
biabduction but also in inferbo. SIOF was using include-based models too but
now libc++ is better and iostreams are implemented in a way that SIOF
understands (instead of being magical creatures) so nothing changed there.
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D16602171
fbshipit-source-id: ce38f045b
Summary:
- make most behaviours independent of the java version so that either works fine without user intervention
- modify regexp used to parse `javac` output to work for all versions
- no need to be sure we are in Java 11 to match java 11-only method name in quandary
- for the rest, provide a command-line flag to specify the java version manually in case it differs from the version that infer was built against
- this only affects the Maven integration for now
To do all that, also change the configure script to record the version of java instead of just a boolean for whether it's >= 10.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D16493988
fbshipit-source-id: 622e91b25
Summary:
The default values of config options can sometimes depend on build-time
configuration values. This makes checking that the manuals "remain the same"
trickier as the manuals can be different depending on the platform. This
removes *all* default values from the checked-in manuals. We could be more
fine-grained and scrub only the values that are susceptible to change but for
now this is probably good enough.
This is done by implementing new options `--help-scrubbed` and
`--help-scrubbed-full` and using these in our tests instead of `--help` and
`--help-full` (which remain unaffected).
Also don't wrap the default values in `$(i,...)` anymore because the defaults
can trigger line breaks and then the man page is ill-formatted because that
format is stupid.
Reviewed By: mityal
Differential Revision: D16543779
fbshipit-source-id: bc929ff8c
Summary:
Replaced by pulse. `--ownership` is now a deprecated form of `--pulse`.
The ownership checker is starting to give wrong answers due to changes in the
clang frontend, so it's better to remove it in favour of pulse.
there_goes_my_hero
Reviewed By: ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D16107650
fbshipit-source-id: bb2446a19
Summary:
This is a simple checker that identifies inefficient uses of `keySet` iterator where (not only the key but also) the value is accessed via `get(key)`. It is more efficient to use `entrySet` iterator which already returns both key-value pairs. This optimization would get rid of many extra lookups which can be expensive.
We simply traverse the CFG starting from the loop head upwards and pick up the map that is iterated over. Then, we check in the loop nodes if there is a call to `get(...)` over this map. If, so we report.
Reviewed By: ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D15737779
fbshipit-source-id: 702465b4e
Summary:
Replace `$(u,...)` with `$(i,...)` since `$(u,...)` doesn't exist.
Cmdliner was emitting a warning at runtime:
cmdliner error: Unknown cmdliner markup $(u,...) in "Specify classes where the destructor should be ignored when computing liveness. In other words, assignement to variables of these types (or common wrappers around these types such as $(u,unique_ptr<type>)) will count as dead stores when the variables are not read explicitly by the program. (default: $(i,[]))"
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15045004
fbshipit-source-id: e03ece4f7
Summary:
Add an option to specify some classes that we really want to warn about
with the liveness checker, even when they appear used because of the
implicit destructor call inserted by the compiler.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D13991129
fbshipit-source-id: 7fafdba84
Summary: This should stop the bleeding until we get a better solution like shared memory + single writer process.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D10868360
fbshipit-source-id: a4d0b064e
Summary: Reports will now be issued for the class loads of the methods specified by the option `--class-loads-roots`.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D10466492
fbshipit-source-id: 91456d723
Summary: First version of an analyzer collecting classes transitively touched.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D10448025
fbshipit-source-id: 0ddfefd46
Summary:
New analysis in foetal form to detect invalid use of C++ objects after their
lifetime has ended. For now it has:
- A domain consisting of a graph of abstract locations representing the heap, a map from program variables to abstract locations representing the stack, and a set of locations known to be invalid (their lifetime has ended)
- The heap graph is unfolded lazily when we resolve accesses to the heap down to an abstract location. When we traverse a memory location we check that it's not known to be invalid.
- A simple transfer function reads and updates the stack and heap in a rudimentary way for now
- C++ `delete` is modeled as adding the location that its argument resolves to to the set of invalid locations
- Also, the domain has a really crappy join and widening for now (see comments in the code)
With this we already pass most of the "use after delete" tests from the
Ownership checker. The ones we don't pass are only because we are missing
models.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D10383249
fbshipit-source-id: f414664cb