Summary: This diff fixes incorrect order of statements on `*p = !b;`.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D26125069
fbshipit-source-id: 9dcefbd34
Summary:
This diff fixes incorrect order of statements on assignments.
In the translation of `LHS=RHS;`, if `RHS` is a complicated expression that introduced new nodes, eg a conditional expression, some load statements for `LHS` came after its usage. To avoid the issue, this diff forces it to introduce new nodes for `LHS`.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D26099782
fbshipit-source-id: 27417cd99
Summary: Model ` std::__optional_storage_base::has_value` as this is what we see in clang AST when translating `std::optional::has_value` for libc++. For libstdc++, we get `std::optional::has_value` as expected.
Reviewed By: skcho, jvillard
Differential Revision: D25585543
fbshipit-source-id: b8d9d2902
Summary:
Skipping the analysis of `std::vector::empty()` caused false positives: in the case where `std::vector::empty()` was called several times ("returning" different values each time), we were not able to prune infeasible paths.
Model `std::vector::empty()` as returning the same value every time it is called.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D23904704
fbshipit-source-id: 52e8a2451
Summary:
This diff adds uninitialized value check in pulse. For now, it supports only simple cases,
- declared variables with a type of integer, float, void, and pointer
- malloced pointer variables that points to integer, float, void, and pointer
TODOs: I will add more cases in the following diffs.
- declared/malloced array
- declared/malloced struct
- inter-procedural checking
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D25269073
fbshipit-source-id: 317df9a85
Summary: To look for captured variable address escape we should only check the validity of the addresses captured by reference. Checking the validity of the address captured by value can cause nullptr dereference false positives.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D25219347
fbshipit-source-id: faf6f2b00
Summary:
This was left as a TODO before: where to place calls to destructors for
C++ temporaries that are only conditionally creating when evaluating an
expression. This can happen inside the branches of a conditional
operation `b?e:f` or in potentially-short-circuited conditions on the
righ-hand side of `&&` and `||` operators.
Following the compilation scheme of clang (observed by looking at the
generated LLVM bitcode), we instrument the program with "marker"
variables, so that for instance `X x = true?X():y;` becomes (following
the execution on the true branch):
```
marker1 = 0; // initialize all markers to 0
PRUNE(true) // entering true branch
X::X(&temporary); // create temporary...
marker1 = 1; // ...triggers setting its marker to 1
X::X(&x, &temporary); // finish expression
if (marker1) {
X::~X(&temporary); // conditionally destroy the temporary
}
```
In this diff, you'll find code for:
- associating markers to temporaries that need them
- code to initialize markers to 0 before full-expressions
- code to conditionally destroy temporaries based on the values of the
markers once the full-expression has finished evaluating
Reviewed By: da319
Differential Revision: D24954070
fbshipit-source-id: cf15df7f7
Summary: Model `folly::Optional::get_pointer` which returns an address to a value if exists or `nullptr` if empty.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D24935677
fbshipit-source-id: 9d990fe07
Summary:
We deliberately stopped as soon as an error was detected when applying a
function call. This is not good as other pre/posts of the function may
apply cleanly, which would allow us to cover more behaviours of the
code.
Went on a bit of a refactoring tangeant while fixing this, to clarify
the `Ok None`/`Ok Some _`/`Error _` datatype returned by PulseInterproc.
Now we report errors as soon as we find them during function calls but
continue accumulating specs afterwards.
Reviewed By: da319
Differential Revision: D24888768
fbshipit-source-id: d5f2c29d7
Summary:
Communicate new facts from the arithmetic domain to the memory domain to
detect contradictions between the two.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D24832079
fbshipit-source-id: 2caf8e9af
Summary:
This is several inter-connected changes together to keep the tests
happy.
The ConditionalOperator `b?t:e` is translated by first creating a
placeholder variable to temporarily store the result of the evaluation
in each branch, then the real thing we want to assign to reads that
variable. But, there are situations where that changes the semantics of
the expression, namely when the value created is a struct on the stack
(eg, a C++ temporary). This is because in SIL we cannot assign the
*address* of a program variable, only its contents, so by the time we're
out of the conditional operator we cannot set the struct value
correctly anymore: we can only set its content, which we did, but that
results in a "shifted" struct value that is one dereference away from
where it should be.
So a batch of changes concern `conditionalOperator_trans`:
- instead of systematically creating a temporary for the conditional,
use the `trans_state.var_exp_typ` provided from above if available
when translating `ConditionalOperator`
- don't even set anything if that variable was already initialized by
merely translating the branch expression, eg when it's a constructor
- fix long-standing TODO to propagate these initialization facts
accurately for ConditionalOperator (used by `init_expr_trans` to also
figure out if it should insert a store to the variable being
initialised or not)
The rest of the changes adapt some relevant other constructs to deal
with conditionalOperator properly now that it can set the current
variable itself, instead of storing stuff inside a temp variable. This
change was a problem because some constructs, eg a variable declaration,
will insert nodes that set up the variable before calling its
initialization, and now the initialization happens *before* that setup,
in the translation of the inner conditional operator, which naturally
creates nodes above the current one.
- add a generic helper to force a sequential order between two
translation results, forcing node creation if necessary
- use that in `init_expr_trans` and `cxxNewExpr_trans`
- adjust many places where `var_exp_typ` was incorrectly not reset when translating sub-expressions
The sequentiality business creates more nodes when used, and the
conditionalOperator business uses fewer temporary variables, so the
frontend results change quite a bit.
Note that biabduction tests were invaluable in debugging this. There
could be other constructs to adjust similarly to cxxNewExpr that were
not covered by the tests though.
Added tests in pulse that exercises the previous bug.
Reviewed By: da319
Differential Revision: D24796282
fbshipit-source-id: 0790c8d17
Summary: We recently introduced a more precise model for constructing an optional from a value by making a shallow copy. However, this introduced Use After Delete false positives. For now, we go back to a less precise model by creating a fresh value. A proper model would be to either make a deep copy or call the copy constructor for a value. We will address this in the following diff.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D24826749
fbshipit-source-id: 3e5e4edeb
Summary: Refactor `folly::Optional` models to make them easier to reuse for `std::optional`
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D24760053
fbshipit-source-id: f665e84c8
Summary: `folly::Optional::value()` returns a reference, hence an error was shown when the actual value was being accessed. Since `value()` throws an exception in case of `folly::none`, we want to show the error message at the call site of `value()`. We do this by dereferencing the result of `value()` in the model.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D24702875
fbshipit-source-id: ca9f30349
Summary:
Before we were creating a fresh internal value when we were constructing `folly::Optional`. This diff models `folly::Optional` constructor more precisely by copying the given value.
There was also a missing dereference in the model of `value_or`
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D24621016
fbshipit-source-id: c86d3c157
Summary: Model `folly::Optional::value_or(default)` to return value if not-empty and `default` if empty.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D24539456
fbshipit-source-id: cc9e176cc
Summary:
Take another page from the Incorrectness Logic book and refrain from reporting issues on paths unless we know for sure that this path will be taken.
Previously, we would report on paths that are merely *not impossible*. This goes very far in the other direction, so it's possible we'll want to go back to some sort of middle ground. Or maybe not. See the changes in the tests to get a sense of what we're missing.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D24014719
fbshipit-source-id: d451faf02
Summary: Structs captured both by reference or by value should have reference in their type. Struct captured by value should first call copy constructor. In this diff we fix the type of the captured variable to include reference. Copy constructor injection is left for the future.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D23688713
fbshipit-source-id: d13748b5d
Summary: Variables captured without initialization do not have correct type inside lambda's body. This diff sets the correct type of captured reference variables inside procdesc and makes sure the translation of captured variables is correct. The translation of lambda's body will then take into account the type of captured var from procdesc.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D23678371
fbshipit-source-id: ed16dc978
Summary: Add missing reference to the type of variable captured by reference without initialization.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D23567685
fbshipit-source-id: b4e2ac0b6
Summary:
We were missing assignment to captured variables with initializers.
Consider the following example:
```
S* update_inside_lambda_capture_and_init(S* s) {
S* object = nullptr;
auto f = [& o = object](S* s) { o = s; };
f(s);
return object;
}
```
which was translated to
```
VARIABLE_DECLARED(o:S*&);
*&o:S*&=&object
*&f =(_fun...lambda..._operator(),([by ref]&o &o:S*&))
```
However, we want to capture `o` (which is an address of `object`), rather `&o` in closure.
After the diff
```
VARIABLE_DECLARED(o:S*&);
*&o:S*&=&object
n$7=*&o:S*&
*&f =(_fun...lambda..._operator(),([by ref]n$7 &o:S*&))
```
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D23567346
fbshipit-source-id: 20f77acc2
Summary:
This can be useful to make pulse forget about tricky parts of the code.
Treat "skipped" procedures as unknown so heuristics for mutating the
return value and parameters passed by reference are applied.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D23729410
fbshipit-source-id: d7a4924a8
Summary: Added a model for copy constructor for `std::function`. In most cases, the SIL instruction `std::function::function(&dest, &src)` gives us pointers to `dest` and `src`, hence, we model the copy constructor as a shallow copy. However, in some cases, e.g. `std::function f = lambda_literal`, SIL instruction contains the closure itself `std::function::function(&dest, (operator(), captured_vars)`, hence, we need to make sure we copy the right value.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D23396568
fbshipit-source-id: 0acb8f6bc
Summary: There was a mismatch between formals and actuals in `std::function::operator()` because we were not passing the first argument corresponding to the closure.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D23372104
fbshipit-source-id: d0f9b27d6
Summary: When we evaluate lambdas in pulse, we create a closure object with `fake` fields to store captured variables. However, during the function call we were not linking the captured values from the closure object. We address this missing part here.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D23316750
fbshipit-source-id: 14751aa58
Summary:
`delete` works exactly like `free` so merge both models together. Also
move the `free(0)` test to nullptr.cpp as it seems more appropriate.
Reviewed By: da319
Differential Revision: D23241297
fbshipit-source-id: 20a32ac54
Summary: Before we were modelling `vector.end()` as returning a fresh pointer every time is was called. It is common to check if an iterator is not the `end()` iterator and proceed to dereference the iterator in that case. In such code pattern `vector.end()` is called twice and returns different fresh values which causes false positives. To fix this, we add a special internal field `__infer_model_backing_array_pointer_to_last_element` to a vector to denote its end. Now, every time we call `vector.end()` we return the value of this field. We introduce a new attribute `EndOfCollection` to mark `end` iterator as the existing `EndIterator` invalidation is not suitable when we need to read the same value multiple times.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D23101185
fbshipit-source-id: fa8a33b58
Summary:
This time it's personal.
Roll out pulse's own arithmetic domain to be fast and be able to add
precision as needed. Formulas are precise representations of the path
condition to allow for good inter-procedural precision. Reasoning on
these is somewhat ad-hoc (except for equalities, but even these aren't
quite properly saturated in general), so expect lots of holes.
Skipping dead code in the interest of readability as this (at least
temporarily) doesn't use pudge anymore. This may make a come-back as
pudge has/will have better precision: the proposed implementation of
`PulseFormula` is very cheap so can be used any time we could want to
prune paths (see following commits), but this comes at the price of some
precision. Calling into pudge at reporting time still sounds like a good
idea to reduce false positives due to infeasible paths.
#skipdeadcode
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D22576004
fbshipit-source-id: c91793256
Summary: We model internal builtin `__new` function to return a non-null value. This fixes nullptr_dereference false positives where we explicitly check the result of a function call for nullptr when the function returns a newly created object.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D22772217
fbshipit-source-id: 37d209697
Summary:
Add a test to the repo to try and detect perf regressions in pulse.
Currently analyzed in ~0.1s. With `--pudge`, takes ~10s.
Sledge does eager normalization and canonicalization when incorporating new facts into formula contexts and the algorithm is polynomial in the number of equalities. This example generates one equality per location in the array => boom. This bypasses the recency model of arrays because the formula needs to be constructed before it can be simplified to get rid of dead variables.
The new arithmetic is not as complete as sledge's algorithm but linear in time. We could use it to simplify the formula *before* passing it to sledge. In fact, that was the original motivation.
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D22574366
fbshipit-source-id: e9044ae09
Summary:
When applying function summaries, we are careful not to violate the
summary's assumptions about non-aliasing. For example, the summary we
generate for `foo(x,y) { *x = *y; }` will have `x` and `y` be allocated
to two different `AbstractValue.t` in the heap, representing
disjointness.
However, the current logic is too coarse and also rejects passing the
same pure value to functions that made no assumption about them being
equal or different, eg `goo(int x,int y) { int z = x + y; }`. This is
because the corresponding `AbstractValue.t` are different in the
callee's summary, but are represented by only one same value in callers
such as `goo(i,i)`.
This diff restricts the "don't violate aliasing" condition to only
consider heap-allocated values. This is consistent with separation logic
by the way: we use the implication `x|->- * y|->- |- x≠y`, which is
valid only when both `x` and `y` are both allocated in the heap as in
the left-hand-side of `|-`.
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D22574297
fbshipit-source-id: 206a18499
Summary: To avoid NULLPTR_DEREFERENCE false positives we want to model some functions as returning non-null. A new flag --pulse-model-return-nonnull allows us to provide a list of such functions.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D22431564
fbshipit-source-id: 9944c7382
Summary:
Keyword `thread_local` in cpp allows us to create a variable with thread storage duration, meaning that the object's lifetime begins when the thread begins and ends when the thread ends.
We get `NULLPTR_DEREFERENCE` false positive for `thread_local` variable since we reallocate it in the `VariableLifetimeBegins` metadata instruction and we do not see further updates to the variable. To solve the issue we special case `VariableLifetimeBegins` instruction for global variables.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D22284135
fbshipit-source-id: 13c14ef90
Summary:
We need to check if `folly::Optional` is not `folly::none` if we want to retrieve the value, otherwise a runtime exception is thrown:
```
folly::Optional<int> foo{folly::none};
return foo.value(); // bad
```
```
folly::Optional<int> foo{folly::none};
if (foo) {
return foo.value(); // ok
}
```
This diff adds a new issue type that reports if we try to access `folly::Optional` value when it is known to be `folly::none`.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D22053352
fbshipit-source-id: 32cb00a99
Summary: To avoid NULLPTR_DEREFERENCE false positives we want to treat some functions as `abort`. A new flag `--pulse-model-abort` allows us to provide a list of such functions.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D21962555
fbshipit-source-id: d46b93c99
Summary: Assigning `nullptr` to `std::function` was causing `NULLPTR_DEREFERENCE` as our model was expecting to get an object in the right hand side of the assignment (`std::function::operator=`) and was dereferencing that object. Assigning `nullptr` to `std::function` removes callable object from it. We model this special case by creating a fresh value.
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D21685318
fbshipit-source-id: 2d4af1933
Summary: Currently we get false positive if we apply `operator--` to the `end()` iterator. To solve this, we model iterator `operator--` not to raise an error for the `EndIterator` invalidation, but to create a fresh element in the underlying array.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D21476353
fbshipit-source-id: 5c722372e
Summary:
It is undefined behavior to dereference end iterator.
To catch end iterator dereferencing issues we change iterator model: instead of having `internal pointer` storing the current index, we model it as a pointer to a current index. This allows us to model `end()` iterator as having an invalid pointer and there is no need to create an invalidated element in the vector itself.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D21178441
fbshipit-source-id: fd6a94b0b
Summary:
List of things happening in this unreviewable diff:
- moved PulsePathCondition to PulseSledge
- renamed --pulse-path-conditions to --pudge
- PulsePathCondition now contains all the arithmetic of pulse
(inferbo+concrete intervals+pudge). In particular, moved arithmetic
attributes into PulsePathCondition.t. PulsePathCondition plays the
role of PulseArithmetic (combining all domains).
- added tests for a false positive involving free()
- PulseArithmetic is now just a thin wrapper around PulsePathCondition
to operate on states directly (instead of on path conditions).
- The rest is mostly moving code into PulsePathCondition (eg, from
PulseInterproc) and adjusting it.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D21332073
fbshipit-source-id: 184c8e0a9
Summary:
We were invalidating "*(vec.__infer_backing_array)" instead of the
address of the field itself.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D21280357
fbshipit-source-id: 48b984800
Summary:
The directory names had some interesting variety due to historical
reasons.
- {c,cpp,objc,objcpp}/errors/ date from the time when infer was only
biabduction
- java/infer/ dates from the time when we had an "--analyzer" option and
"infer" was one of them (sic), and eg another was "eradicate".
- c/biabduction/ dates from the time when the biabduction analysis was
being migrated to the "checkers" (AI) framework. For some reasons the
tests there are not a subset of c/infer/ but seem to be entirely new
tests.
The convention now dictates that we should name all of these
*/biabduction/. This diff moves the existing tests from c/biabduction/
into c/biabduction/misc/.
Reviewed By: mityal
Differential Revision: D21300147
fbshipit-source-id: 516d1cb15
Summary: Iterator invalidation traces were based on vector rather than iterator itself.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D21202047
fbshipit-source-id: 62ce8a488
Summary:
We ignored allocator models for vectors, and were not able to initialize vectors properly. This diff fixes this issue.
It also adds a test which was a FN before.
Reviewed By: skcho, jvillard
Differential Revision: D21089492
fbshipit-source-id: 6906cd1d1
Summary:
Replace horrible hack with ok hack.
The main difficulty in implementing the disjunctive domain is to avoid
the quadratic time complexity of executing the same disjuncts over and
over again when going around loops:
First time around a loop, assuming for example a single disjunct `d`:
```
[d]
loop body
[d1' \/ d2']
```
Second time around the same loop: the new pre will be the join of the
posts of predecessor nodes, so `old_pre \/ post(loop,old_pre)`, i.e.
`d \/ d1' \/ d2'`. Now we need to execute `loop body` again
*without running the symbolic execution of `d` again* (and the time after
that we'll want to not execute `d`, `d1'`, or `d2'`).
Horrible hack (before): Disjuncts have a boolean "visited" attached
that does its best to keep track of whether a given disjunct is old or
new. When executing a single *instruction* look at the flag and skip the
state if it's old. Of course we have no way to know for sure so it turns
out it was often wrongly re-executing old disjuncts. This was also
producing the wrong results over even simple loops: only the last
iteration would make it outside the loop for some reason. Overall, the
semantics were pretty untractable and shady at best.
New hack (this diff): only run instructions of a given *node* on
disjuncts that are not physically equal to the "pre" ones already in the
invariant map for the current node.
This gives the correct result over simple loops and a nice performance
improvement in general (probably the old heuristic was hitting the
quadratic bad case more often).
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D21154063
fbshipit-source-id: 5ee38c68c
Summary:
When encountering a constant, pulse creates an abstract value (a
variable) to represent it, and remembers that it's equal to it. The
problem is that pulse doesn't yet know how to deal with the fact that
some variables are going to be equal to each other.
This hacks around this issue in the case of constants, within the same
procedure, by remembering which constants have been assigned to which
place-holder variables, and serving those variables again when the same
constant is translated again.
Limitation: this doesn't work across procedure calls as the "constant
maps" are not saved in summaries.
Something to look out for: we don't want to make `if (p == NULL)` create
a path where `p` is invalid (we only make null invalid when we see an
assignment from 0, i.e. `p = NULL;`).
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D21089961
fbshipit-source-id: 5ebb85d0a