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
Summary:
In some error paths we may end up querying the state for the instruction
being executed, but that is only populated by biabduction. Now it's
populated by AI checkers too.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D10381068
fbshipit-source-id: dca1325d7
Summary:
When the backend crashes we print which instruction/file/... we were analysing,
but because of recursion we can end up repeating that information all
the way to the toplevel call.
This makes sure we only print the innermost one, we don't care about the
calling context because the analysis is compositional.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D10381141
fbshipit-source-id: 1c92bb861
Summary:
Trace events would crash when infer subprocesses were spawned by the build
system because they didn't detect if the file was already initialised
correctly.
Also trace the clang capture.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D10380745
fbshipit-source-id: 76e1d4d7e
Summary:
It avoids raising an exception when unexpected arguments are given to
placement new. We will revert this after fixing the frontend to parse
user defined `new` correctly in the future.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D10378136
fbshipit-source-id: d494f781b
Summary:
Use same code for deciding whether two accesses conflict across java/clang, by adapting that of the clang version.
Eliminate/simplify some code.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz, jberdine
Differential Revision: D10217383
fbshipit-source-id: dc0986d05
Summary:
It unsets `var_exp_typ` of `trans_state` during the translations of
placement parameters, so they are translated independently against the
target variable and class of the `new` function.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz, jvillard
Differential Revision: D10161419
fbshipit-source-id: 7f588a91c
Summary: It enables placement_new to get three parameters, which happens when placement_new is overloaded (e.g. Boost).
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D10100324
fbshipit-source-id: 0ecb0a404
Summary:
Using debugging on uninit raised an exception. A file was opened twice and closed twice.
This happened because the two abstract interpreters (SIL, LowerHIL) conflicted.
Let's use the LowerHIL-AI directly
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D10126442
fbshipit-source-id: 113c9e131
Summary:
Load proc descs from the "procedures" sqlite table instead of from
file-wide cfgs stored in the "source_files" table. This removes the need
for a cache of these file-wide CFGs, which was needed because loading
them is expensive and potentially needed in case we need to load the
proc descs of several procedures in the same file. Now we can just load
the proc descs one by one and not worry about caching.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D10173355
fbshipit-source-id: 665636121
Summary:
Fix the logic for computing duplicate symbols. It was broken at some point and some duplicate symbols creeped into our tests. Fix these, and add a test to avoid duplicate symbols detection to regress again.
Also, this removes one use of `Cfg.load`, on the way to removing file-wide CFGs from the database.
Reviewed By: ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D10173349
fbshipit-source-id: a0d2365b3
Summary:
First step: record the proc desc of each procedure in the "procedures"
table. Update them according to the attributes logic. Bonus: this
proc-desc for a procedure is now always in sync with its attributes.
For now nothing uses these per-procedure cfgs. Later diffs make more and
more use of them and eventually kill off file-wide CFGs from the
database.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D10173350
fbshipit-source-id: b6d222bee