Summary: Not sure if anyone uses this but there, now it's modelled.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D16008162
fbshipit-source-id: f4795dcba
Summary:
Prevent false positives about variables captured by value gone out of
scope.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D16008165
fbshipit-source-id: d70e47db4
Summary: We know how to do interprocedural calls so let's use that!
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D16008164
fbshipit-source-id: 4c34bf704
Summary:
`function::operator=` is called whenever we assign a literal lambda to a
variable, so it's pretty useful to be able to report anything on
lambdas.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D16008163
fbshipit-source-id: a9d07668d
Summary:
Printing `Exp.Const (Cfun proc_name)` adds `_fun_` in front of the
procedure name, eg `_fun_foo` instead of `foo`. This showed up in pulse
traces.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D16004606
fbshipit-source-id: 72ac6866f
Summary:
Fixes a false positive where the address of a C++ temporary is bound to
a static const reference variable then returned. The fix doesn't try to
establish that the variable is a const reference so could lead to false
negatives but that can be addressed later.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D16004538
fbshipit-source-id: e403dbefe
Summary:
[apologies for the unreviewable diff...]
Get rid of HIL expressions in pulse. This finishes the HIL -> SIL
migration. The first step made pulse start from SIL instructions but
would translate most accesses to HIL to re-use most of the existing
pulse code. This diff gets rid of the intermediate translation of SIL
expressions to HIL expressions.
Big changes:
1. `PulseOperations` mostly rewritten, driven by using `Exp.t` instead of `HilExp.AccessExpression.t` for everything.
2. Stop trying to reverse-engineer what addresses mean in terms of
access paths from program variables. Rely on the trace pointing at
the right places in the code to be enough. This is because it wasn't
that useful (and could even be misleading when wrong) but could be
prohibitively expensive in degenerate cases (eg nodes with tens of
thousands of successive array accesses...)
3. `PulseAbductiveDomain.apply_post` now returns the computed return
value instead of recording it itself.
4. Change of vocabulary: `materialize` -> `eval`, `crumb` -> `event`
5. Function calls arguments are now evaluated prior to doing anything
else, which saves everything else from having to (remember to) do
that. In particular, this changes how models look quite a bit.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15986373
fbshipit-source-id: 1d79935de
Summary:
Passing an absolute project path as buck config flag makes buck caching almost impossible for infer artefacts, since on every host/run that directory can be different.
Eliminate that and rely on shell commands to find the project root, executed within the genrule.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D15963807
fbshipit-source-id: b6e590029
Summary: Inject destructor calls to destroy a temporary when its lifetime ends.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15674209
fbshipit-source-id: 0f783a906
Summary:
Now that HIL doesn't help us anymore we need to reconstruct its mapping
"SIL logical var -> program access path". We already have everything we
need in pulse: it suffices to walk the current memory graph starting
from program variables until we find the value of the temporary we are
interested in.
This diff also builds some type machinery to make sure all accesses are
explained.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15824959
fbshipit-source-id: 722c81b39
Summary:
It turns out HIL gets in the way of a precise heap analysis. For
instance, instead of:
```
n$0 = *&x.f
_ = delete(&x)
*&y = n$0
```
HIL tries hard to forget about intermediate variables and shows instead
```
_ = delete(&x)
*&y = *&x.f
```
Oops, that's a use-after-delete, whereas the original code was safe.
While it's easy to write SIL programs that are completely unsound for
HIL, they are not generated very often from the frontends. In fact, the
problem became apparent only when making the clang frontend translate
C++ temporaries destructors, which produces the situation above
routinely.
This diff makes the minimal amount of change to make Pulse build and
produce equivalent results (minus HIL bugs) starting from SIL instead of
HIL. The reporting sucks for now because we need to translate SIL
temporaries back into program access paths. This is done in the next
diff.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15824961
fbshipit-source-id: 8e4e2a3ed
Summary:
- Add allocation costs to `costs-report.json` and enable diffing over allocation costs.
- Also, let's be more consistent and modular in naming our cost issues.
- introduce a generic issue type `X_TIME_COMPLEXITY_INCREASE` where `X` can be one of the cost kinds. If the function is on the cold start, issue can have the `COLD_START` suffix. Similarly for infinite/zero/expensive calls.
- Change `PERFORMANCE_VARIATION` -> `EXECUTION_TIME_COMPLEXITY_INCREASE`
- Add new issue type for `ALLOCATION_COMPLEXITY_INCREASE_COLD_START` which will be enabled by default
- Refactor cost issues to be more modular and succinct. This also makes addition of a new cost kind very easy by adding the kind into the `enabled_cost_kinds` list in `CostKind.ml`
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15822681
fbshipit-source-id: cf89ece59
Summary:
This one isn't caught because we don't destruct temporaries that are
bound to a const reference. According to the C++ standard these should
get destroyed when the const reference gets destroyed but instead we
just don't destroy them for now.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15760209
fbshipit-source-id: 32c935ec0
Summary:
In a next diff temporaries will get destructed at the end of their
lifetimes and that naive model would be causing false positives.
The flipside is that we lose all reports on closures for now, will need
to model them separately later.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15695943
fbshipit-source-id: c2c482c02
Summary:
This started as an attempt to understand how to modify the frontend to
inject destructors for C++ temporaries (see next diffs).
This diff rewrites the existing logic for computing the list of
variables that should be destroyed at the end of each statement, either
because it's the end of their syntactic scope or because control flow
branches outside of their syntactic scope.
The frontend translates a function from the last instructions to the
first, but scope computation needs to be done in the other direction, so
it's done in a separate pass *before* the main translation happens. That
first pass creates a map from statements in the AST to the list of
variables that should be destroyed at the end of these statements. This
is still the case now.
Before, that map would be computed in a bit of a weird way: scopes are
naturally a stack but instead of that the structure maintained was a
flat list + a counter to know where the current scope ended in that
list.
In this diff, redo the computation maintaining a stack of scopes
instead, which is a bit cleaner. Also treat more instructions as
introducing a new scope, eg if, for, ...
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15674208
fbshipit-source-id: c92429e82
Summary:
Somewhat trivial: add a string to "Destruction" nodes to indicate why
they were created. Rename the main `instruction_aux` function into
`instruction_translate` (see next diff for why).
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15674211
fbshipit-source-id: 8a7eda72c
Summary:
I rewrote the test so it doesn't need any C++ headers so that:
- it's easier to see what's going on
- it's easier to debug: the whole AST is now somewhat readable vs before
the headers made it impossibly long
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D15674213
fbshipit-source-id: d98941983
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:
Move genrule capture integration logic from shell to OCaml.
Also, stop relying on side-effects of buck compilation for constructing the infer-deps.txt file used for merging. Now this is obtained by passing `--show-output` to buck, which spits out the `buck-out` output paths to the targets we asked to build.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D15715608
fbshipit-source-id: 8fa896ba6
Summary:
The synthetic methods from `topl.Property` are now nonempty: they
simulate a nondeterministic automaton.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D15668471
fbshipit-source-id: 050408283
Summary:
Instrument SIL according to TOPL properties. Roughly, the
instrumentation is a set of calls into procedures that simulate a
nondeterministic automaton. For now, those procedures are NOP dummies.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D15063942
fbshipit-source-id: d22c2f6fa
Summary:
When multiple buck java tests use the same `buck-out` they sometimes fail. This isn't surprising, as they presumably clobber each other's output when running on the same files.
Since there is no reason to have this global, shared buck repo, create one for each test, inside the test directory. Also, clean up the Makefiles a bit -- they provide bogus compile targets, for example, and have mostly wrong source dependencies.
That done, remove the `testlock` crutch which enforces mutual exclusion between tests, from the buck/java tests.
I do not understand why the buck clang tests can share the global repo without failure, but there you go.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D15579133
fbshipit-source-id: 7eff79173
Summary: The previous commit broke the `--foo arg` case because it matched `--foo` in the case looking for `--foo=`.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15670472
fbshipit-source-id: ab81c7357
Summary:
It is unsafe to call protocol methods defined optional. Before calling them we should check it
the implementation exists by calling
`if ([object respondsToSelector:selector(...)]) ...`
Without the above check we get run time crashes.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D15554951
fbshipit-source-id: f0560971b
Summary: In its new form it actually tests that infer takes the correct branch.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15494297
fbshipit-source-id: 7b9bb8f75
Summary:
- take advantage more structured attributes in the exported AST
- circumvent new format of `if` and `switch`
- a few new features/nodes but nothing major there
update-submodule: facebook-clang-plugins
Reviewed By: mbouaziz, martintrojer
Differential Revision: D15453572
fbshipit-source-id: c0c24345f
Summary:
Somehow clang now chooses slightly different arguments to pass to `ld`
in the invocation that `ndk-build` makes to link:
```
--- clang7 2019-05-28 07:47:19.214949009 -0700
+++ clang8 2019-05-28 07:46:55.095924374 -0700
@@ -1,6 +1,15 @@
"/opt/android_ndk/r15c/toolchains/aarch64-linux-android-4.9/prebuilt/linux-x86_64/lib/gcc/aarch64-linux-android/4.9.x/../../../../aarch64-linux-android/bin/ld"
"--sysroot=/opt/android_ndk/r15c/platforms/android-21/arch-arm64"
+"-EL"
"--fix-cortex-a53-843419"
+"-z"
+"now"
+"-z"
+"relro"
+"-z"
+"max-page-size=4096"
+"--hash-style=gnu"
+"--hash-style=both"
"--no-add-needed"
"--enable-new-dtags"
"--eh-frame-hdr"
@@ -32,7 +41,7 @@
"--fatal-warnings"
"-lc"
"-lm"
-"-lstdc++"
+"-lc++"
"-lm"
"-lgcc"
"-ldl"
```
In particular:
- `lc++` results in `libc++.so` not found from the toolchain
- the forced relocation `-z relro` fails with "/..//bin/ld: ./obj/local/arm64-v8a/objs/hello/__/hello.o: Relocations in generic ELF (EM: 183)" and other weirder errors
Somehow pretending the C++ compiler is `clang` instead of `clang++` stops the insanity.
Also add an Application.mk file to specify some sane defaults.
Also add `V=1` to the `ndk-build` invocation in our tests so that when it fails we have a bit more to work with.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz, martintrojer
Differential Revision: D15518447
fbshipit-source-id: 40203814b
Summary:
- Rename `invariantModels` to `purityModels`
- Track which arguments are modified in purity models. Before we were invalidating all arguments of impure modeled functions. Instead, now we only invalidate modified args given in the model. This should ideally result in more precision in the analysis.
- Add some more purity models for :`cast`, `new`, `new_array` and `Math.random`
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15535332
fbshipit-source-id: 5395800d9
Summary:
That test wasn't hooked up to `make test` and so regressed at some
unknown time in the past. Just recording the new state of things for
now.
Reviewed By: ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D15495234
fbshipit-source-id: 14fb112de
Summary:
Thanks to the newly added `StarField`, path length is better controlled before ondemand is used.
Hence there is no need to (unsoundly) canonicalize paths then anymore.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D15409716
fbshipit-source-id: 9ea7b4717
Summary:
This messes with the deduplication heuristic when templated function
names show up in the error messages, since the heuristic demands that
the error messages are the same.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15374333
fbshipit-source-id: 70232d254
Summary:
Improve the error messages, change is more or less documented in the
code.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D15374334
fbshipit-source-id: f1dd54180
Summary:
Some edge case involving casting field pointers to the structure type itself generated arbitrarily long paths when used in a loop.
Without changing the widening, this diff avoids repetitions of fields in paths by abstracting them with a star.
E.g. `x.a.b.c.b` will become `x.a.b.c*.b`, and so will `x.a.b.c.a.b`, `x.a.b.c.c.b`, or `x.a.b.c.b.b`.
Reviewed By: ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D15352143
fbshipit-source-id: 5ea426c5e
Summary:
Before: the trace would explain how a value was invalidated and
accessed, but not how the value that was invalidated had been
constructed.
Now: `PulseTrace.t` records breadcrumbs of how the value was constructed
in addition to the interproc "action" trace leading to the invalidation
or access action.
Concretely:
```
void bad(X &x) {
X *y = x;
X *z = x;
delete y;
access(z);
}
```
will produce the trace:
Invalidation part:
y = x
delete y
Access part:
z = x
access(z)
access to z->f inside of access(z)
Before this diff the "Access part" would be missing the "z = x" part of
the trace, so it might be confusing why `z` has anything to do with `y`.
However, such "breadcrumbs" are not recorded in the inter-procedural
part, only the sequence of calls is. This is a trade-off for simplicity,
maybe it's enough for developers maybe it isn't, we'll find out later.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D15354438
fbshipit-source-id: 8d0aed717
Summary:
update-submodule: facebook-clang-plugins
We used to translate `offsetof` by an unknown value.
This fixes it. It is now translated like an integer literal.
Reviewed By: ddino
Differential Revision: D15317799
fbshipit-source-id: ae89e0ec5
Summary:
Enabling starvation by default (D15158597) makes infer double report racerd
issues in these tests. The reason seems to be that both racerd and starvation
use `IssueLog` to record issues, so racerd records its issues there (using side
effects), then starvation adds its own (empty) set of issues and reports
whatever is there again. Since nothing cleans up the IssueLog in the middle,
racerd issues get reported twice: once as racerd issues and the other as
starvation issues.
Let's fix this later, for now just unbreak the test itself.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz, ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D15277552
fbshipit-source-id: 3e7be8795
Summary:
Feedback from peterogithub:
- mention which access path is being invalidated and accessed in the message
- mention the line at which it was invalidated (the line at which it's accessed is already the line at which we report)
- traces for stack variable/C++ temporary address escapes
- delete double implementation of the same functionality in
`PulseTrace`: `location_of_action_start` is the same as
`outer_location_of_action`...
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D14800294
fbshipit-source-id: 3d9ab9b3d
Summary:
Similarly to function parameters (and the return value), we need to
apply the pre/post of a function call to the globals mentioned in its
summary.
- tigthen summaries further to remember only abducible variables in the
post (as well as in the pre)
- take globals into account when applying pre/post pairs
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D14780800
fbshipit-source-id: fc0d180bb
Summary:
The heuristic to detect variables going out of scope was to detect any
access expression passed as argument to an injected destructor call.
However destructor calls are also injected in destructor bodies to
destruct each field of an object, so the heuristic would detect fields
going out of scope, which, erm, doesn't make sense. Limit the heuristic
to local program variables.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D14771454
fbshipit-source-id: ffa3c9fe3
Summary:
Only throw values to the pre if they can be followed from "abducible"
variables: formals of the current method and globals.
Because figuring out if a `Pvar.t` is a formal of the current procedure
is actually a giant pain, hack something not too bad instead:
pre-register all formals at the start of the analysis of the
procedure. Then the only other variables we care about in the
precondition are globals, which we can detect easily.
This is mostly an optimisation (summaries won't include irrelevant
"abduced" facts about the procedure's local variables anymore), but it
also fixes a bug where we would sometimes overwrite things in the pre. I
think that's why the tests improved.
Reviewed By: ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D14753493
fbshipit-source-id: 08e73637f
Summary:
This mostly doesn't make sense. The only thing this would have been good
for was to give the most accurate result on access paths such as
`*(&(x.f))`, but these are normalised anyway (into `x.f`) so we actually
never see these. That said there might be some use to some similar logic
in the future, but in the meantime let's delete the current feature as
it wasn't thought through.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D14753492
fbshipit-source-id: 597cec027