Summary: Those are not particularly relevant for the biabduction analysis. It would be easy to have a dedicated checker for this if we happen to need one day.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5530834
fbshipit-source-id: 316e60f
Summary:
The Eradicate `Nullable` checker should now be run using:
infer -a checkers --eradicate ...
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5529226
fbshipit-source-id: 0de2956
Summary:
This is unsound but will help the analysis to report less false alarms with the common pattern:
if (a.get() != null) {
a.get().foo();
}
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5528227
fbshipit-source-id: 750db4a
Summary: This was reusing the side effects of the `add_constraints_on_retval` for the final purpose of being angelic and just assigning a fresh value to the lhs of the load.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5507037
fbshipit-source-id: ec1c89c
Summary:
Bumps facebook-clang-plugins to a version that outputs sizeof() info in bytes and not bits.
update-submodule: facebook-clang-plugins
Reviewed By: akotulski
Differential Revision: D5526747
fbshipit-source-id: 6019542
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 `--failures-allowed` was doing for the Clang frontend what `--keep-doing` was doing for the backend. This revision merges the two options to simplify the Infer CLI and our tests.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D5474347
fbshipit-source-id: 09bcea4
Summary:
update-submodule: facebook-clang-plugins
Moving to a newer version of clang, see ffb5dd0114
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D5452529
fbshipit-source-id: 28bc215
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: Using a dedicated abstract domain, like Quandary does, is more suitable for taint analysis.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5473794
fbshipit-source-id: c917417
Summary:
Both `stringWithUTF8String` and `stringWithString` implements copy semantics that copies the content of their parameter into a newly allocated buffer. We modeled this as pointer assignment in the past, which means that once we write
```
NSString* foo() {
char buf[...];
...
return [NSString stringWithUTF8String:buf];
}
```
We are going to get a spurious stack variable address escape report because local pointer `buf` is assigned to the newly created string and the string gets returned.
This diff tries to address the issue by heap-allocating a buffer and `memcpy` the contents in `stringWithUTF8String` and `stringWithString`. But this change will create another problem: the allocated buffer will be reported as leaked by the backend, while in reality those buffers won't actually be leaked as they are allocated in a region that will be periodically autoreleased. To suppress spurious memory leak FPs, I added another attribute `Awont_leak` that will suppress the leakage report on any expressions that get tagged with it.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5403084
fbshipit-source-id: df6de7f
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: We get the wrong answer on most of them for now, but that is expected
Reviewed By: ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D5429242
fbshipit-source-id: 4899079
Summary:
This commit avoids precision loss on pruning.
// x -> [s$1, s$2]
if(x) { ... }
// x -> ?
before: x -> [min(0, s$1), max(0, s$2)]
because two x values, [0, 0] (true case) and [s$1, s$2] (false case), were joined after the if branch.
after: x -> [s$1, s$2]
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5431009
fbshipit-source-id: 14a9efe
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: CFG nodes were not connected and some instructions ended up in wrong place. Fix those issues
Reviewed By: dulmarod
Differential Revision: D5406720
fbshipit-source-id: 2a70e1a
Summary:
Problem: The analyzer did not know that the value of `v.size()` is an alias of `v.infer_size`, so `v.infer_size` is not pruned by the if condition. As a result it raises a false alarm.
void safe_access(std::vector<int> v) {
if (v.size() >= 10) {
v[9] = 1; // error: BUFFER_OVERRUN Offset: [9, 9] Size: [5, 5]
}
}
void call_safe_access_Good() {
std::vector<int> v(5, 0);
safe_access(v);
}
Solution: Adding alias for return value to the abstract domain.
Now Inferbo can prune `v.infer_size` because it knows that the value of `v.size()` is an alias of `v.infer_size`. There is already an alias domain in Inferbo, so we added a specific room for the retrun value.
Reviewed By: jvillard, mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5396988
fbshipit-source-id: 4a4702c
Summary: Adding to the Quandary tests, the list of tests that are already working for the bi-abduction based taint analysis.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5395734
fbshipit-source-id: c4f2e79
Summary:
:
because otherwise people would believe they can use the internal representation of these std lib but it fails for our models.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D5368671
fbshipit-source-id: 4e53d5a
Summary:
:
Get rid of model location in reports.
The goal is to avoid changing `issues.exp` whenever a model is updated.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D5356608
fbshipit-source-id: 88ecaba
Summary:
Indexing into a string literal expression would generate a fresh
variable on every application of a transformer. This violated
finiteness of the domain, and caused divergence.
Reviewed By: da319
Differential Revision: D5342951
fbshipit-source-id: e95e84e
Summary:
It instantiates fields of structures when a pointer to which is given
as a function parameter, e.g., `foo(&s);`.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz, jvillard
Differential Revision: D5337645
fbshipit-source-id: c06da29
Summary:
We keep track of both `beginPtr` and `endPtr` but the modelling was mostly
about `beginPtr` as some sort of approximation I guess. This shouldn't change
much but will be useful later when doing more iterator stuff.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5255772
fbshipit-source-id: 0f6e3e8
Summary: This seems to move in the right direction. Also, `const operator[]` did not do an `access_at`, which I fixed.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5320427
fbshipit-source-id: c31c5ea
Summary: Unknown library returns the unknown pointer as well as the top interval.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz, jvillard
Differential Revision: D5282669
fbshipit-source-id: 34c7e18
Summary:
This diff tries to achieve the followings: if we have the following C++ codes:
```
bool foo(int x, int y) {
return &x == &y;
}
```
We want the C++ frontend to emit Sil as if the input is written as
```
bool foo(int x, int y) {
if (&x == &y) return 1; else return 0;
}
```
This matches the behavior of our Java frontend.
The reason why we prefer an explicit branch is that it will force the backend to eagerly produce two different specs for `foo`. Without the explicit branch, for the above example the backend would produce one spec with `return = (&x == &y)` as the post condition, which is not ideal because (1) we don't want local variables to escape to the function summary, and (2) with the knowledge that no two local variables may alias each other, the backend could actually determines that `&x == &y` is always false, emitting a more precise postcondition `return = 0`. This is not possible if we do not eagerly resolve the comparison expression.
Reviewed By: akotulski
Differential Revision: D5260745
fbshipit-source-id: 6bbbf99
Summary:
:
There are throw wrapper functions like `std::__throw_bad_alloc()` defined in both libstdc++ (https://github.com/gcc-mirror/gcc/blob/master/libstdc%2B%2B-v3/include/bits/functexcept.h) and libc++ (e.g. 907c1196a7/include/new (L145)). Folly actually exports some of them as well (diffusion/FBS/browse/master/fbcode/folly/portability/BitsFunctexcept.h). The function body of those wrappers merely throws the corresponding exception. My understanding is that the primary purpose of the wrappers is to throw the exception if everything goes well and to fall back to something reasonable when exception is disabled (e.g. when `-fno-exceptions` is passed to the compiler).
The problem is that infer doesn't really understand what those functions do, and I've seen some false positives get reported as a result of it. So to remove those FPs we need to either model them or handle them specially. Modeling those wrappers by either whitelisting them or overriding the include files turns out to be difficult, as those wrappers are only declared but not defined in the STL headers. Their implementations are not available to Infer so whitelisting them does nothing, and if I provide custom implementations in the headers then normal compilation process will be disrupted because the linker would complain about duplicated implementation.
What I did here is to replace functions whose name matches one of the throw wrapper's name with a `BuiltinDecls.exit`. I have to admit that this is a bit hacky: initially I was trying to do something more general: replacing functions with `noreturn` attribute with `BuitinDecls.exit`. That did not work because, CMIIW, the current frontend only exports function attributes for functions with actual bodies, not declaration-only functions. I'd love to be informed if there are better ways to handle those wrappers.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5266030
fbshipit-source-id: 4580227
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:
:
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:
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: 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:
For now, we just support clearing the taint on a return value.
Ideally, we would associate a kind with the sanitizer and only clear taint that matches that kind.
However, it's fairly complicated to make that work properly with footprint sources.
I have some ideas about how to do it with passthroughs instead, but let's just do the simple thing for now.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5141906
fbshipit-source-id: a5b8b5e
Summary:
- model `exit` as `Bottom`
- model `fgetc` as returning `[-1; 255]` rather than `[-1; +oo]`
- reduced the number of model functions for simple models
Reviewed By: KihongHeo
Differential Revision: D5137485
fbshipit-source-id: 943eeeb
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:
This diff fixes unintentional bottoms in pointer arithmetic of inferbo.
The pointer arithmetic on addresses of variables (not array) just returns
the operand.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D5060424
fbshipit-source-id: 495d8b8
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: This fixes a couple of false positives as objects of BufferedReader don't need to be closed if the wrapped reader resource gets closed correctly.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5106596
fbshipit-source-id: 725fb80
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: Useful to have Eradicate and Biabduction agree on how to inform that the analysis that some objects are not null.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D5075127
fbshipit-source-id: 9e56981
Summary: String are very important for taint analysis, have to make sure that we have the right models/the right behaviors for unknown code.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D5054832
fbshipit-source-id: 7e7ee07
Summary:
Previously all knowledge of the dynamic length of such arrays was lost to infer:
```
void foo(int len) {
int a[len];
}
```
The translation of this program would make no reference to `len` (except as a
param of `foo`).
Translate this "initialization" using the existing `__set_array_length` infer
builtin, as:
```
# Declare local a[_]
n$0 = len;
__set_array_length(a, len);
```
update-submodule: facebook-clang-plugins
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D4969446
fbshipit-source-id: dff860f
Summary:
This commit fixes a problem that the buffer overrun checker incorrectly
stops when a global variable (bottom) is involved in control flow.
In the new version, abstract memories return Top for unanalyzed abstract
variables.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5016447
fbshipit-source-id: 5132448
Summary:
The code was pretty fragile, it's less fragile now. We should probably just
delete that and start outputting proper class/package info directly in the
report.json instead of reverse-engineering them.
Fixes#640
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D4905973
fbshipit-source-id: 1590067
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: In particular, the heuristics for propagating taint via unknown code needs to be aware of the frontend's trick of introducing dummy return variables.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5046345
fbshipit-source-id: da87665
Summary:
HIL had only been tested in Java, and it made some assumptions about what array expressions look like (the LHS is always resolvable to an access path) and assignments (the LHS is always an access path) that aren't true in C.
Fixed the code so we won't crash in this case.
Thanks to jeremydubreil for catching this.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5047649
fbshipit-source-id: e8484f4
Summary:
There are two pointer-related operations you can do in C++ but not Java that we need to support in taint analysis:
(1) `*formal_ptr = ...` when `formal_ptr` is a formal that's a pointer type. Java doesn't have raw pointers, so we didn't need to handle this case.
(2) Passing by reference, which Java also doesn't have (everything is pass-by-value).
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5041246
fbshipit-source-id: 4e8f962
Summary:
Introduce `infer-<command>` for each command, except for internal commands
(only `infer-clang` for now) which are not exported. Install these executables
(which are just symlinks to `infer`) on `make install`. The main executable
looks at the name it was invoked with to figure out if it should behave as a
particular command.
Get rid of `InferClang`, `InferAnalyze`, and `InferPrint`. As a bonus, we now
only need to build one executable: `infer`, which should be a few seconds
faster (less link time).
`InferAnalyze` is now `infer-analyze` and `InferPrint` is `infer-print`. To run
`InferClang`, use a symlink named `clang`, `clang++`, etc. to `infer`. There
are such symlinks available in "infer/lib/wrappers/" already.
I also noticed that the scripts in xcodebuild_wrappers/ don't seem useful
anymore, so use wrappers/ instead, as for `make`.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5036495
fbshipit-source-id: 4a90030
Summary: Same as D5026082, but allowing specification in JSON rather than harcoded in Infer.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5030042
fbshipit-source-id: 8a6cfee
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: Making sure simple passthroughs like the identity function work in C++.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D5024031
fbshipit-source-id: ce48ead
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:
Needed because this is how the Clang frontend translates returns of non-POD, non pointer values (I think)?
Will handle the more general case of pass by reference soon.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D5017653
fbshipit-source-id: 1fbcea5
Summary:
`[a, b] < [a, _]` and `[_, a] < [b, a]` are most probably false (it comes from size < size)
Mark definitely unsatisfied conditions as B1, others as B2+
Reviewed By: KihongHeo, jvillard
Differential Revision: D4962107
fbshipit-source-id: ba8f469
Summary:
The bufferoverrun checkers can now be run with:
infer -a checkers --bufferoverrun -- ...
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D5010689
fbshipit-source-id: 2eaa396
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:
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:
Don't store redundant information in C++ template Type.Name.t.
New signature:
```
| CppClass (qual_name, template_args)
```
For example, for `std::shared_ptr<int>`, will look like this:
```
| CppClass (["std", "shared_ptr"], Template [int])
```
While it used to be:
```
| CppClass (["std", "shared_ptr<int>"], Template (["std", "shared_ptr"], [int]))
```
Reviewed By: jberdine, mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D4834512
fbshipit-source-id: cb1c570
Summary:
Before we understood ownership, we needed this to avoid a mountain of Builder-related FP's.
Now that we have fairly sophisticated understanding of ownership, we can kill this hack.
Reviewed By: jaegs
Differential Revision: D4940238
fbshipit-source-id: 8d86e57
Summary:
Title.
The way types are printed is completely valid, but little weird for some C++ programmers:
`int const` - same as `const int`
`int * const` - pointer is `const`, value under it is not
`int const *` - pointer is not `const`, but the value is
`int const * const` - both pointer and value are const
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D4962180
fbshipit-source-id: dcb02e3
Summary:
Modify the type of `Exp.Sizeof ...` to include the value that the expression
evaluates to according to the compiler, or None if it cannot be known
statically.
Use this information in inferbo.
Mostly unused in the BiAbduction checker for now, although it could be useful
there too.
update-submodule: facebook-clang-plugins
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D4953634
fbshipit-source-id: be0999d
Summary:
- Use Logging for logging
- Add a few extra debug (not ON by default)
- No space before colon
Depends on D4961957
Reviewed By: KihongHeo
Differential Revision: D4961989
fbshipit-source-id: 7c8697d
Summary: The purpose of the annotation reachability analysis is to report when a method annotated with `X` never calls, directly or indirectly, another method annotated with `Y`. However, there can be different call stacks following different execution paths from `X` to `Y`. Reporting more than one call stack ending with the same annotated procedure does not bring more signal to the end user. So the purpose of this diff is to avoid those duplicated reports and report at most one annotation reachability issue per end of call stack.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D4942765
fbshipit-source-id: 46325a7
Summary:
- Bottom-lift abstract memory domain to express unreachable node
- Two cases to make a node unreachable
+ constant: when an evaluation result of condition expression is
bottom or false, e.g., "prune(0)".
+ alias: when the same structure e is compared to itself with "<",
">", and "!=", e.g., "prune(e < e)".
- Add test for the new prune (prune_constant.c, prune_alias.c)
- Debug the semantics of comparison
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D4938055
fbshipit-source-id: d0fadf0
Summary:
As an interprocedural checker, SIOF should not run unless explicitly required.
Make it a new type of analyzer like other similar checkers.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D4937820
fbshipit-source-id: a9e2d38
Summary: `bufferoverrun` is not part of `checkers` yet so bufferoverrun tests require their own Makefile
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D4937558
fbshipit-source-id: 20380f1
Summary: Sawja assigns them on multiple control-flow paths, so they're not SSA.
Reviewed By: peterogithub
Differential Revision: D4896745
fbshipit-source-id: c805216
Summary:
There are false positives in the current analysis due to the
use of conjunction in the treatment of threaded. Changing conjunction to disjunction
removes these false positives. Some new false negatives arise, but all the old tests pass.
This is a stopgap towards a better solution being planned.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D4883280
fbshipit-source-id: c2a7e6e
Summary: The flakiness is exercised by upgrading the OCaml compiler to 4.04.0.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D4859904
fbshipit-source-id: 0dd7ff6
Summary:
If we couldn't project the callee access path into the caller during summary application, we still added the corresponding trace to the caller state.
This was wasteful; it just bloats the caller with state it will never look at.
Fixed it by making `get_caller_ap_node` return `None` when the state won't be visible in the caller.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D4727937
fbshipit-source-id: 87665e9
Summary: This should make the reports much easier to understand. We can generalize to reporting a stack trace for all of the writes in the future if we wish.
Reviewed By: peterogithub
Differential Revision: D4845641
fbshipit-source-id: 589fdbc
Summary:
Make it possible to write one model which will be used by all template instantiations.
There is one big missing piece: infer never tries to do template instantiation by itself. With current code, it's possible to use generic models
as long as header contains `__infer_generic_model` annotation (see the test as an example).
This is not viable to modify all headers with this annotation hence infer will try to do template instantiation for generic models in later diffs.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D4826365
fbshipit-source-id: 2233e42
Summary: If two public methods touch the same state and only one is marked `ThreadSafe`, it's reasonable to report unsafe accesses on both of them.
Reviewed By: peterogithub
Differential Revision: D4785038
fbshipit-source-id: 5a80da4
Summary: `__attribute__((annotate("")))` is better way of passing information to the frontend
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D4818805
fbshipit-source-id: 6e8add2
Summary:
*Unless* the unprotected write runs on the main thread and the read doesn't.
Otherwise, we'll already report on the unprotected write, and we don't want to duplicate.
Reviewed By: peterogithub
Differential Revision: D4798357
fbshipit-source-id: 5de06a0
Summary:
This is step further simplify the code to avoid cases where the summary of the procedure being analyzed can exist in two different versions:
# one version is the summary passed as parameter to every checker
# the other is a copy of the summary in the in-memory specs table
This diff implements:
# the analysis always run through the `Ondemand` module (was already the case before)
# the summary of the procedure being analyzed is created at the beginning of the on-demand analysis call
# all the checkers run in sequence, update their respective part of the payload and log errors to the error table
# the summary is store at the end of the on-demand analysis call
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D4787414
fbshipit-source-id: 2d115c9
Summary:
Adds a new type and branching for a missing path of execution.
closes#575
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D4738681
fbshipit-source-id: f72344c
Summary:
It can be useful when debugging infer or the Makefiles themselves to see what
`make` is doing. Instead of editing Makefiles to remove `@` now you can `make
VERBOSE=1`.
This is just `git ls-files | grep -e Makefile -e '.*\.make' | xargs sed -e 's/^\t@/\t$(QUIET)/' -i`, and adding the definition of `QUIET` to Makefile.config.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D4779115
fbshipit-source-id: e6e4642
Summary:
No new functionality here; mostly `FN_` tests documenting our current limitations.
Will start chipping away at the false negatives in follow-up diffs.
Reviewed By: peterogithub
Differential Revision: D4780013
fbshipit-source-id: 7a0c821
Summary: Bringing the logic back to where it was before the big refactoring of the reporting logic.
Reviewed By: peterogithub
Differential Revision: D4774541
fbshipit-source-id: afeaaf8
Summary:
Move all of the reporting on top of the aggregation functionality.
This lets us delete lots of code
Reviewed By: peterogithub
Differential Revision: D4772223
fbshipit-source-id: 47cc51a
Summary:
This was the one type of races we were not yet reporting (besides ones that use the wrong synchronization :)).
Wrote new utility function to aggregate all accesses by the memory they access.
This makes it easy to say which accesses we should report and what their conflicts are.
Eventually, we can simplify the reporting of other kinds of unsafe accesses using this structure.
Reviewed By: peterogithub
Differential Revision: D4770542
fbshipit-source-id: 96d948e
Summary:
For collections whose type does not express that the collection is thread-safe (e.g., `Collections.syncrhonizedMap` and friends).
If you annotate a field holding one of these collections, we won't warn when you mutate the collection.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D4763565
fbshipit-source-id: 58b487a
Summary: It seems that we were not really using the `Bottom` part of the domain as a pair of (empty call map, empty tracking var map) was already acting as bottom.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D4759757
fbshipit-source-id: 53dedfe
Summary:
Most of our tests work by comparing the output of some command to a baseline
expected output. It's often needed to update that baseline.
Previously, that was crudely done by attempting to move every foo.exp.test file
to foo.exp. This does not work terribly well, in particular because
foo.exp.test might be stale.
Instead, add a `replace` target to every test that knows how to update the
baseline. This allows custom behaviours too, eg in the differential tests.
Most of the tests include base.make or differential.make, so add a replace target
there. A few tests are completely custom, add a replace target to them too.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D4754279
fbshipit-source-id: ec34273
Summary:
This issue was spotted in the wild. There may be more of those, unfortunately it's hard to predict
More general problem is that types in infer frontend diverge from clang's types for DerivedToBase cast.
Then, infer uses types from clang anyway and that confuses backend. Getting it always right is very hard
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D4754081
fbshipit-source-id: 5fb7069
Summary:
If I read off the main thread and write on the main we
could have a race. (Writes off main are already reported.)
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D4746138
fbshipit-source-id: 8b6e9c5
Summary:
All tests were redirecting `stderr` into duplicates.txt which made it much harder to see other error messages in stderr (such as uncaught exceptions).
To mitigate it, write duplicates to separate file and don't redirect `stderr` to another file.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D4728938
fbshipit-source-id: 8ad2fc8