Summary:
The analyzer currently does not understand the control flow of
Singletons, which leads to false alarms. This diff is an unsound hack
that simply ignores any read or write accesses made when computing the
value of a singleton.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5979639
fbshipit-source-id: 34caecb
Summary:
Model folly::SharedMutex lock and unlock operations, some
apache::thrift::concurrency::ReadWriteMutex operations, some
folly::RWSpinLock operations, and folly::MicroSpinLock operations.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5974225
fbshipit-source-id: 19e2816
Summary:
Previously, annotating something ThreadSafe meant "check that it is safe to run all of this procedure's methods in parallel with each other" (including self-parallelization).
This makes sense, but it means that if the user writes no annotations, we do no checking.
I'm moving toward a model of inferring when an access might happen on a thread that can run concurrently with other threads, then automatically checking that it is thread-safe w.r.t to all other accesses to the same memory (on or off the current thread thread).
This will let us report even when there are no `ThreadSafe` annotations.
Any method that is known to run on a new thread (e.g., `Runnable.run`) will be modeled as running on a thread that can run in parallel with other threads, and so will any method that is `synchronized` or acquires a lock.
In this setup, adding `ThreadSafe` to a method just means: "assume that the current method can run in parallel with any thread, including another thread that includes a different invocation of the same method (a self race) unless you see evidence to the contrary" (e.g., calling `assertMainThread` or annotating with `UiThread`).
The key step in this diff is changing the threads domain to abstract *what threads the current thread may run in parallel with* rather than *what the current thread* is. This makes things much simpler.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5895242
fbshipit-source-id: 2e23d1e
Summary:
Indicate if read or write is protected, and do not print only the
field but also the object involved in the race.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5974250
fbshipit-source-id: 351a576
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: Not using this for now, and it seems good to simplify the complex domain as much as we can.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5970233
fbshipit-source-id: a451503
Summary:
Inject a marker using a global variable in <iostream>, and whitelist it so that
the frontend translates it.
Use the marker in the SIOF checker to tell whether a file includes <iostream>.
If so, start the analysis of its methods assuming that the standard streams are
initialised.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5941343
fbshipit-source-id: 3388d55
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:
The only language types we have are Java/Clang/Python. The unit of analysis is a source file, and you can't write a source file that mixes two or more of these languages (to the best of my knowledge).
This diff simplifies using the assumption that all procedures in a file are written in the same language.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5886942
fbshipit-source-id: 88c3759
Summary:
The only language types we have are Java/Clang/Python. The unit of analysis is a source file, and you can't write a source file that mixes two or more of these languages (to the best of my knowledge).
This diff simplifies using the assumption that all procedures in a file are written in the same language.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5886942
fbshipit-source-id: 8555a16
Summary: Only Eradicate uses this, no need to create it for every checker.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5886775
fbshipit-source-id: 7242437
Summary:
A Java cluster checker currently defines a "cluster" as all of the procedures in the same class.
But the cluster checker actually knows about all the procedures defined in the same source file.
In some checkers (such as thread-safety), we want to aggregate results across classes in the same file, not just methods in the same class.
This refactoring leaves the behavior the same for now, but will make it easier to do this in the near future.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5885896
fbshipit-source-id: 0815fca
Summary: Handling the utility functions for asserting that we're on background thread.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5863435
fbshipit-source-id: 3ad95b5
Summary:
Previously, we just tracked a boolean representing whether we were possibly on the main thread (true) or definitely not on the main thread (false).
In order to start supporting `Thread.start`, `Runnable.run`, etc., we'll need something more expressive.
This diff introduces a lattice:
```
Any
/ \
Main Background
\ /
Unknown
```
as the new threads domain. The initial value is `Unknown`, and we introduce `Main` in situations where we would have introduced `true` before.
This (mostly) preserves behavior: the main difference is that before code like
```
if (*) {
assertMainThread()
} else {
x.f = ...
}
```
would have recorded that the access to `x.f` was on the main thread, whereas now we'll say that it's on an unknown thread.
Reviewed By: peterogithub
Differential Revision: D5860256
fbshipit-source-id: efee330
Summary:
It's useful to be able to disable de-duplication on the command line with `--no-filtering`.
Gate de-duplication with `Config.filtering` and move the de-duplication tests to a new directory under the build systems tests.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5865329
fbshipit-source-id: 5094f5b
Summary:
Suggesting to add `_Nullable` on the fields checked for, or assigned to, `nullptr` will allow the biabduction analysis to report null dereferences that are related to the lifetime of objects.
Depends on D5832147
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5836538
fbshipit-source-id: c1b8e48
Summary: That match branch is Java-only but could be reached with a C++ method, causing a crash.
Reviewed By: jberdine, mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5814041
fbshipit-source-id: 6b1b501
Summary: It's useful to be able to configure both max depth and max width
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5801567
fbshipit-source-id: 0138cd7
Summary:
Races on the internal implementation of data structures defined in
system headers are currently not detected, since the memory accesses
are in procedures that are not analyzed.
This diff adds models for a few std::map operations that indicate if
they read or write the underlying representation.
Reviewed By: da319
Differential Revision: D5804293
fbshipit-source-id: 55ff28c
Summary:
Read the documentation and it doesn't seem like these functions are guaranteed to choose the same value in different runs.
I hypothesize that these may be the source of flakiness in the thread-safety tests/smoke tests.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D5794384
fbshipit-source-id: 02b7a96
Summary:
We supported globals as sources before, but we did so by allowing ClangTrace etc. to match against any access path in the footprint of the trace.
This is very powerful/flexible, but it's ultimately not a good idea because it leads to traces that are hard to read.
This is because a footprint source doesn't have any information about its provenance: we might know that the value came from a global, but we don't know where the read occurred.
The mechanism for handling procedure calls as sources already knows how to solve this problem.
This diff implements globals as sources as a special case of procedure call sources instead.
This will give us much nicer traces with full provenance of the read from the global.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5772299
fbshipit-source-id: 491ae81
Summary:
When a lambda has an `auto` parameter, the inferred type of the parameter because part of the name.
Our heuristic for identifying lambda was checking if the lambda's name was exactly `operator()`, which won't catch this case.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D5753323
fbshipit-source-id: 85ff75a
Summary:
- failwith police: no more `failwith`. Instead, use `Logging.die`.
- Introduce the `SimpleLogging` module for dying from modules where `Logging`
cannot be used (usually because that would create a cyclic dependency).
- always log backtraces, and show backtraces on the console except for usage errors
- Also point out in the log file where the toplevel executions of infer happen
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5726362
fbshipit-source-id: d7a01fc
Summary:
I'm working on parameterizing access trees with a config that will limit max depth + perhaps width if needed.
This is a stepping stone to enforcing max depth.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D5693453
fbshipit-source-id: c15b0ee
Summary:
Rather than printing the footprint using its actual representation (an access trie with bool nodes), print it as a set of access paths.
This makes it easier to read sources in Quandary specs/debug Quandary.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5682630
fbshipit-source-id: ac55b7f
Summary:
Add `is_empty` to `AbstractDomain.WithBottom` sig and use the empty checks for nicer printing of access trees: don't print empty nodes/traces.
This should make it easier to debug Quandary; it's pretty hard to stare at an access tree and see what's going on right now.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5682248
fbshipit-source-id: 56d2a9d
Summary:
This simplifies the jbuild files: no need to list these files explicitly
anymore, nor to exclude them explicitly from the main `InferModules` library
(due to their different compilation flags).
Isolate common parts into jbuild.common do `cat`-based code inclusion into
jbuild files to factorize code.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5678328
fbshipit-source-id: 6d7d925
Summary:
We now represent the footprint with an access trie, so this code is no longer required.
This lets us simplify things a bit
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5664484
fbshipit-source-id: c35edf2
Summary:
In looking at summaries that Quandary took a long time to compute, one thing I notice frequently is redundancy in the footprint sources (e.g., I might see `Footprint(x), Footprint(x.f), Footprint(x*)`).
`sudo perf top` indicates that joining big sets of sources is a major performance bottleneck, and a large number of footprint sources is surely a big part of this (since we expect the number of non-footprint sources to be small).
This diff addresses the redundancy issue by using a more complex representation for a set of sources. The "known" sources are still in a set, but the footprint sources are now represented as a set of access paths (via an access trie).
The access path trie is a minimal representation of a set of access paths, so it would represent the example above as a simple `x*`.
This should make join/widen/<= faster and improve performance
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5663980
fbshipit-source-id: 9fb66f8
Summary:
The previous widening operator added stars to the *end* of paths that existed in `next` but not `prev`. This is not enough to ensure termination in the case where the trie is growing both deeper and wider at the same time.
The newly added test demonstrates this issue. In the code, there's an ever-growing path of the form `tmp.prev.next.prev.next...` that wasn't summarized by the previous widening operator. The new widening is much more aggressive: it replaces *any* node present in `next` but not `prev` with a `*` (rather than trying to tack a star onto the end). This fixes the issue.
This issue was causing divergence on tricky doubly-linked list code in prod.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5665719
fbshipit-source-id: 1310a92
Summary:
Instead of a whitelist and blacklist and default issue types and default
blacklist and filtering, consider a simpler semantics where
1. checkers can be individually turned on or off on the command line
2. most checkers are on by default
3. `--no-filtering` turns all issue types on, but they can then be turned off again by further arguments
This provides a more flexible CLI and is similar to other options in the infer
CLI, where "global" behaviour is generally avoided.
Dynamically created checkers (eg, AL linters) cause some complications in the
implementation but I think the semantics is still clear.
Also change the name of the option to mention "issue types" instead of
"checks", since the latter can be confused with "checkers".
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5583238
fbshipit-source-id: 21de476
Summary:
We previously lumped ownership predicates in with all other predicates. That limited us to a flat ownership domain.
This diff separates out the ownership predicates so we can have a richer lattice of predicates with each access path.
This lets us be more precise; for example, we can now show that
```
needToOwnBothParams(Obj o1, Obj o2) {
Obj alias;
if (*) { alias = o1; } else { alias = o2; }
alias.f = ... // both o1 and o2 need to be owned for this to be safe
}
void ownBothParamsOk() {
needToOwnBothParams(new Obj(), new Obj()); // ok, would have complained before
}
```
is safe.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5589898
fbshipit-source-id: 9606a46
Summary: Useful for identifying user-controlled array accesses that could lead to buffer overflows
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5520985
fbshipit-source-id: 92984f6
Summary:
Record the list of access paths (if any) used in the index expression for each array access.
This will make it possible to use array accesses as sinks in Quandary
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5531356
fbshipit-source-id: 8204909
Summary:
It's nice to have "raw" as the default kind of access path, since it's used much more often than the abstraction.
This is also a prereq for supporting index expressions in access paths, since we'll need mutual recursion between accesses and access paths.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5529807
fbshipit-source-id: cb3f521
Summary:
Works the same way as read/write races on fields, except that are more relaxed (er, unsound) in deciding whether two containers may alias.
This is needed to avoid reporting a ton of FP's; full explanation in comments.
Reviewed By: da319
Differential Revision: D5493404
fbshipit-source-id: 0a5d8b1
Summary:
The way we represented container writes before was pretty hacky: just use a dummy field for the name of the method that performs the container write.
This diff introduces a new access kind for container writes that is much more structured.
This will make it easier to soundly handle aliasing between containers and support container reads in the near future.
Reviewed By: da319
Differential Revision: D5465747
fbshipit-source-id: e021ec2
Summary: This gives us more expressive power when defining sources--we can use heuristics like "`foo(o)` only returns a source when `o` is not a constant".
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D5467935
fbshipit-source-id: f3d581d
Summary:
Pretty basic: warn when we see an assignment instruction `x = ...` and `x` is not live in the post of the instruction.
Only enabled for Clang at the moment because linters already warn on this for Java. But we can enable it later if we want to (should be fully generic).
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5450439
fbshipit-source-id: 693514c
Summary: Making it simple to add a new access type for "un-annotated interface call" in an upcoming diff.
Reviewed By: da319
Differential Revision: D5445914
fbshipit-source-id: f29e342
Summary:
This just makes the warnings silent for now. We may improve the analysis to check if the null check on the captured fields are consistent with the annotation on the corresponding parameters.
Eradicate also has the same issue. I added a test to outline this. The biabduction analysis will also probably fail on the same of annotation lookup. We may want implement the proper fix at the level of `Annotation.field_has_annot`.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5419243
fbshipit-source-id: 6460de8
Summary: This will allow us to gradually get rid of the exceptions thrown during the analysis while detecting the regressions earlier
Reviewed By: jberdine, jvillard
Differential Revision: D5385154
fbshipit-source-id: 605e3f5
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:
They are expected to occur in C++ code, so don't fail on them. For now
just skip them, although a better treatment of dynamic dispatch may be
needed later.
Reviewed By: da319, mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5292462
fbshipit-source-id: 4285514
Summary: Looks much less confusing when C++ templates with `<stuff>` are involved.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5255551
fbshipit-source-id: f4a93e6
Summary:
After D5245416 I was taking a closer look and decided it's best to get rid of the `Interprocedural` module altogether.
Since jeremydubreil's refactoring to pass the summaries around everywhere, this module doesn't do much (it used to make sure the summary actually got stored to disk).
Client code is shorter and simpler without this module.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5255400
fbshipit-source-id: acd1c00
Summary: The docs for this said that it stores the summary to disk, which is no longer true. `compute_summary` is more descriptive of what it actually does now.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5245416
fbshipit-source-id: f5138cd
Summary: We had a model for `Pools.SimplePool`, but were missing models for `Pools.Pool`. Since `SimplePool` and `SynchronizedPool` both extend `Pool`, modeling it should cover all of the cases.
Reviewed By: ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D5236280
fbshipit-source-id: 9bbdb25
Summary:
The ThreadSafety analysis currently reports on methods only if some
class in the file defining the method is annotated ThreadSafe, or
if it is called by some other such method call. Conflating files and
classes is a bit of a Javaism that seems to be unnecessary.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5182319
fbshipit-source-id: aa77754
Summary:
:
No longer use deprecated reporting function for the suggest nullable checker
Depends on D5205009
Reviewed By: grievejia
Differential Revision: D5205843
fbshipit-source-id: f6dd059
Summary:
Now that we can run several inter-procedural analyses at the same time, we should no longer use the function `Reporting.log_error_deprecated` as it logs the errors in the specs table. This specs table is normally used for caching and will be deprecated in favor of having a cache summaries for the callees in the `Ondemand` module (to avoid deserialising a callee more than once within the same process).
This revision just renames the reporting functions.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5205009
fbshipit-source-id: b066549
Summary:
Read/write race errors should always show one trace for a read and one trace for a write.
We forget to pass the conflicting writes to the reporting function in one case, which prevented us from showing a well-formed trace.
Fixed it by making the `conflicts` parameter non-optional
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5209332
fbshipit-source-id: 05da01a
Summary: These can be useful in other checkers that have a notion of footprint.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D5189193
fbshipit-source-id: c5bd91b
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:
Change the API of `Logging` wrt to writing to files and to the console (see
changes in logging.mli).
Write only to one log file: infer-out/log. Prefix each line with the kind of
warning and the PID of the process emitting it. Writing with `O_APPEND` is
atomic so the file should not get garbled by concurrent writes. To get the
output of a single process, find out which one interests you by looking at
infer-out/log, then `grep ^[<PID>] infer-out/log`.
Introduce 3 log levels for debug output and command-line options to set them
for various categories individually.
Change tons of `"\n"` to `"@\n"` so the `Format` module is aware of newlines
without us having to look through every character of every logged string for
`\n` characters.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5165317
fbshipit-source-id: 93c922f
Summary:
This makes it clearer that something went wrong. Most `failwith` did not set
this prefix already, so I opted to append it automatically and remove it from
the few instances that added it manually.
Also add quotes around bad user arguments to lessen possible confusion.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5182272
fbshipit-source-id: 20e4769
Summary:
This is a refactoring diff to put the info into the abstract domain
to track when we have done steps which would invalidate "I think I have a proof".
Subsequent diffs will start manipulating ThumbsUpDomain
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5172181
fbshipit-source-id: 51ceba6
Summary: We were almost always using `~report_reachable:true`, and in the cases where we weren't it is fine to do so. In general, a sink could read any state from its parameters, so it makes sense to complain if anything reachable from them is tainted.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5169067
fbshipit-source-id: ea7d659
Summary:
This was a subtle one. The ranking function of `aux` is the cardinality of `m`..
But if `may_alias` is not reflexive, then `k_part` will be empty, `non_k_part` will be the same size, and we'll diverge.
Sneakily, `may_alias` is actually *not* reflexive because `is_subtype t1 t2` doesn't check for the equality of `t1` and `t2`.
That is confusing and should be fixed separately.
For now, just make sure `may_alias` is always reflexive and add an assertion that `k_part` is never empty.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5177427
fbshipit-source-id: 0549d6a
Summary:
This is a minimal change to (poorly) recognize and model std::mutex
lock and unlock methods, and to surface all thread safety issues for
C++ based on the computed summaries with no filtering.
This ignores much of the Java analysis, including everything about the
Threads domain. The S/N is comically low at this point.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5120485
fbshipit-source-id: 0f08caa
Summary:
ThreadSafety.may_alias crashed on C++ code because it assumed Java
field names.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5147284
fbshipit-source-id: d10841f
Summary: Using Conjunction for thread join has known false negatives. Finer grained recording of threading information fixes this.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5111161
fbshipit-source-id: aab483c
Summary: The debug HTML for Quandary/thread-safety was still printing the SIL instructions, which is not very helpful. Print the HIL instructions instead.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5112696
fbshipit-source-id: a0aa925
Summary: Gflags is a popular library used to create command line arguments. Flags shouldn't flow directly to `exec` etc.
Reviewed By: jvillard, mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5058393
fbshipit-source-id: ab062f8
Summary: There was no option to trigger this checker so it was not possible to enable it when not running the default list of checkers
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5057088
fbshipit-source-id: 7af36f5
Summary:
An array has a static or dynamic length (number of elements), but it also has a
stride, determined by the type of the element: `sizeof(element_type)`. We don't
have a good `sizeof()` function available on SIL types, so record that stride
in the array type.
update-submodule: facebook-clang-plugins
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D4969697
fbshipit-source-id: 98e0670
Summary:
With this change, running the biabduction analysis with
infer -a infer -- ...
or with:
infer -a checkers --biabduction -- ...
take the same time and give the same list of results.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5026676
fbshipit-source-id: ef23911
Summary: A lot of C++ library functions look like this, so it's important to have.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5026082
fbshipit-source-id: 6f421b6
Summary:
Now,
infer -a infer -- ...
and
infer -a checkers --biabduction -- ...
will return the same list of errors
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5023223
fbshipit-source-id: f52ce5d
Summary:
Ran the build with -w,-32 , delete code, repeat, until a fixpoint of no more warnings is reach.
Unfortunately we cannot fatal on w32 because ppx_compare can generate dead code (eg `compare_t` and only `compare` is used).
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D4945800
fbshipit-source-id: c95afb6
Summary:
The Siof checkers can now be run with:
infer -a checkers --siof -- ...
and also runs by default using:
infer -a checkers -- ...
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5009731
fbshipit-source-id: e0e2168
Summary:
First step to be able to enable and disable the checkers to run in the following form:
> infer -a checkers --checker1 --checker2 --checker3 -- ...
and have a predefined list of checkers that are run by default with:
> infer -a checkers -- ...
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5007377
fbshipit-source-id: d7339ef
Summary:
While working on making the AI framework simpler to use, it become hard to change the shared API while keeping these unused checkers compiling, and even harder to keep their functionality since there is no tests for them.
Also, these checkers are not useful as proof of concept since using the AI framework is the preferred way to write new kinds of analysis now.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D4999387
fbshipit-source-id: 497284b
Summary:
This gives the option to run the biabduction analysis together with the other Clang-based checkers with the command:
infer -a checkers --biabduction -- ...
The filtering does not work yet because the filtering for the biabduction analysis matches the analyzer `Infer`, and does not filter much when the analyzer is `Checkers`, which is the case here.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D4773834
fbshipit-source-id: 16300cc
Summary:
Last step for converting thread-safety and quandary to HIL.
Push the logic for managing the id map and converting the instructions into a functor.
This way, client analyses can simply write HIL transfer functions and call the functor.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D4989987
fbshipit-source-id: 485169e