Summary:
- Do not add actuals of a call as unstable.
- Replace access trie with simple set of paths, which is easier to debug/argue correct.
- Fix bug where a prefix path was searched, as opposed to a *proper* prefix.
- Restrict interface to the minimum so that alternative implementations are easier.
Reviewed By: ilyasergey
Differential Revision: D8573792
fbshipit-source-id: 4c4e174
Summary: C/C++ code can, in some cases, generate a large number of temporary (Sil) variables. Since we are already not reporting races on these, not recording them gives some perf back.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz, jvillard
Differential Revision: D8566999
fbshipit-source-id: 148ac46
Summary: Trying to convert a large int literal to an OCaml int raises an exception. The use case here actually needed a float anyway, so add an API for that.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D8550410
fbshipit-source-id: 382495b
Summary: Record that it is not supported: https://github.com/facebook/infer/issues/8
Reviewed By: mbouaziz, dulmarod
Differential Revision: D8442762
fbshipit-source-id: fa271cb
Summary:
I realized that control variable analysis was broken when we had multiple back-edges for the same loop. This is often the case when we have a switch statement combined with continue in a loop (see `test_switch` in `switch_continue.c`) or when we have disjunctive guards in do-while loops.
This diff fixes that by
- defining a loop by its loophead (the target of its backedges) rather than its back-edges. Then it converts back-edge list to a map from loop_head to sources of the loop's back-edges.
- collecting multiple guard nodes that come from potentially multiple exit nodes per loop head
In addition, it also removes the wrong assumption that an exit node belongs to a single loop head.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8398061
fbshipit-source-id: abaf288
Summary:
We need to report on non-private methods (the opposite even leads to FPs sometimes on deadlocks). To do this, the domain needs to change so that the interpretation of an order pair `a,b` is no longer "lock `a` is taken in the *current method* and held until lock `b` is taken". Instead the meaning is now "lock `a` is taken in some method *of the same class with the current method* and is held until `b` is taken".
These changes are quite drastic because the previous implementation optimised extensively around the previous use case.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8395351
fbshipit-source-id: a2bd22b
Summary:
The deadlock reports (the actual string) were too low level, in order to avoid bug hash clashes. Now that we deduplicate this is less of an issue, so it's an opportunity to improve readability.
```
Potential deadlock.
Trace 1 (starts at `void Interproc.interproc1Bad(InterprocA)`) first locks `this` in class `Interproc*` (line 9 in `void Interproc.interproc1Bad(InterprocA)`) and then locks `b` in class `InterprocA*` (line 14 in `void Interproc.interproc2Bad(InterprocA)`).
Trace 2 (starts at `void InterprocA.interproc1Bad(Interproc)`), first locks `this` in class `InterprocA*` (line 37 in `void InterprocA.interproc1Bad(Interproc)`) and then locks `d` in class `Interproc*` (line 42 in `void InterprocA.interproc2Bad(Interproc)`).
```
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8394978
fbshipit-source-id: 671ccb0
Summary:
The deadlock reports (the actual string) were too low level, in order to avoid bug hash clashes. Now that we deduplicate this is less of an issue, so it's an opportunity to improve readability.
```
Potential deadlock.
Trace 1 (starts at `void Interproc.interproc1Bad(InterprocA)`) first locks `this` in class `Interproc*` (line 9 in `void Interproc.interproc1Bad(InterprocA)`) and then locks `b` in class `InterprocA*` (line 14 in `void Interproc.interproc2Bad(InterprocA)`).
Trace 2 (starts at `void InterprocA.interproc1Bad(Interproc)`), first locks `this` in class `InterprocA*` (line 37 in `void InterprocA.interproc1Bad(Interproc)`) and then locks `d` in class `Interproc*` (line 42 in `void InterprocA.interproc2Bad(Interproc)`).
```
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8379328
fbshipit-source-id: bc33983
Summary: Deadlocks can be very noisy, so dedup reports on same line by showing only the one with the shortest trace and a count of the suppressed ones.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8351148
fbshipit-source-id: 8913db2
Summary: We were missing reads of `a` if it was used in void cast, i.e. `(void) a;` This caused dead store false positives: we were not using `exp` that was the result of translating `a`. This diff creates a call to built-in skip function with `exp` as its argument, which causes the analyses to see reads of `exp`.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8332092
fbshipit-source-id: f3b0e10
Summary: Introduce an annotation that forces the summary of a method to be free of blocking events, without suppressing other reports.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D8276787
fbshipit-source-id: be9eed8
Summary: The case of nullable properties was already working but there was no test for it.
Reviewed By: dulmarod
Differential Revision: D8266468
fbshipit-source-id: c074d69
Summary: Create mechanism for suppressing starvation reports. To do that, refactor and expose a Checkers function.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8259583
fbshipit-source-id: f5b5a63
Summary: There is a number of dangling pointer dereference false positives coming from our treatment of union in c/cpp. For now, do not treat union fields as uninitialised.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8279802
fbshipit-source-id: a339b0e
Summary: We get a lot of false positives for union types as union fields are treated as separate memory locations at the moment. For now we do not treat union fields as uninitialised.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8277363
fbshipit-source-id: efe5b4a
Summary:
Use the component of the abstract state `events` to report. This set contains reachability facts about blocking calls and lock acquisitions.
The other component, `order`, contained pairs of a reachable event `e'` from an event option with the semantics that if the option is `None` then we have an element that now goes into `events`, and if the option is `Some e` then the element represents a lock acquired and a trace *from* `e` to `e'`
Now, `order` can be simplified to proper pairs of events, without the option.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D8227665
fbshipit-source-id: e6f4dac
Summary:
It's useful to test that the bucket a given error is classified as doesn't
change over time without notice.
This records the bucket for *all* the tests, even though some never produce a
bucket. This is to be on the safe size instead of risking to forget adding the
bucket information when the test changes, or when copy/pasting from a test that
doesn't have buckets to one that does.
The implementation is pretty crude: it greps the beginning of the qualifier
string for a `[bucket]`.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8236393
fbshipit-source-id: b3b1eb9
Summary:
Change the license of the source code from BSD + PATENTS to MIT.
Change `checkCopyright` to reflect the new license and learn some new file
types.
Generated with:
```
git grep BSD | xargs -n 1 ./scripts/checkCopyright -i
```
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil, mbouaziz, jberdine
Differential Revision: D8071249
fbshipit-source-id: 97ca23a
Summary:
There can be multiple reports per line, especially when calling in a method which has itself multiple reports.
When reporting at the callsite, report only the issue with the highest severity (picked manually per type of event).
Deadlocks are not de-duplicated, as they are relatively rare and the info in mupltiple reports may be important.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8160940
fbshipit-source-id: ea6a5c0
Summary:
Moving away from C++ include-based models means that we cannot reliably detect
anymore whether a file includes <iostream> or not. In order not to be too
spammy, let's always assume standard streams are initialized for now when the
include models are off.
Recent versions of libstdc++ make these models redundant so there is hope that in a
bright future the analysis of std streams initialisation will work correctly without infer
having to have its own models anyway.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8043467
fbshipit-source-id: d118043
Summary: Set arguments of pointer type as initialised for indirect function calls.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8097895
fbshipit-source-id: 830f568
Summary: Track and surface the reasons why a method is assessed to run on the UI thread.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8096099
fbshipit-source-id: 2403c6c
Summary:
The reported location was always the start of the enclosing procedure, which is wrong in many ways.
A nice side-effect is that some code can then be eliminated and Ondemand.analyze used, avoiding getting the procdescs in the process.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D8056306
fbshipit-source-id: 67c2c8d
Summary: Treat array accesses as initialised if they are passed by reference.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D8071247
fbshipit-source-id: 5480e90
Summary: Use AccessExpressions instead of AccessPath in uninit analysis. This will allow us to distinguish between pointers and their dereferences.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D8042359
fbshipit-source-id: 604bcbc
Summary:
It improves the precision of widening operations of interval:
upper_bound_widen (min(n, s), s) = s
lower_bound_widen (max(n, s), s) = s
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D8038941
fbshipit-source-id: 61b10cb
Summary:
Labels inside switch statements were causing havoc (see test), and the translation of switch statements in general could be improved to handle more cases.
It turns out that `case` (and `default`) statements are more or less fancy labels into the code. In other words, if you erase all the `case XXX:` and `default:` strings in the `switch` statement you get the real structure of the program, and `switch` just jumps straight to the first `case` directives (and to the second if the first one is not satisfied, etc. until all `case`/`default` have been considered).
This suggests an alternative implementation: translate the body of the `switch` and simply record the list of switch cases inside that body, along with where they point to. Then post-process this list to construct the control flow of the `switch`, which points into the control-flow of the `body`. In order not to modify every function in `CTrans` to propagate the current list of cases, I created an ugly `ref` inside `SwitchCase` instead (but it cannot be directly accessed and it's guaranteed to be well-parenthesised wrt nested switches by the `SwitchCase` API so it's not too bad).
[unrelated] Also make translation failures output more information about what exactly in the source code is causing the crash, and the ancestors in the AST that lead to the crash site.
Reviewed By: martinoluca
Differential Revision: D8011046
fbshipit-source-id: 8455090
Summary: Follow C++ in having local variables owned plus silence reports on paths rooted on logical vars. We need both because when propagating ownership from right to left, the initial status of a temp var as owned is lost.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D7988575
fbshipit-source-id: 2e817d7
Summary:
This diff:
- translates C++ `catch` blocks
- adds an exceptional control-flow edge from the end of a `try` block to the beginning of a `catch` block
This obviously doesn't reflect the way exceptions actually work, but I think it is better than what we have now. For one thing, we'll see/translate code inside `catch` blocks, which were opaque before. If Clang analyses don't want this behavior, they can simply use `ProcCfg.Normal` (which, up until this diff, behaved identically to `ProcCfg.Exceptional`.
In the future, we can extend `trans_state` to track blocks that might throw an exception, and have each of these blocks transition to `catch` instead.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D7814521
fbshipit-source-id: 67b86a6
Summary:
Before we were computing the size of an abstract state (`range`) using the `NonNegativeBound` domain but it wasn't able to express product of symbolic values.
This diff introduces a domain for that.
The range of an interval is still computed in `NonNegativeBound` but then the product is done in `TopLiftedPolynomial` so all costs end up being of that type.
The //symbols// of a polynomial are `NonNegativeBound` (so the polynomial only represent non-negative values, perfect for a cost), which handles substitution correctly, i.e. it gives zero instead of negative values.
Reviewed By: ddino
Differential Revision: D7397229
fbshipit-source-id: 6868bb7
Summary:
The annotation UiThread can, and is, used on classes as opposed to just methods, so extend the modelling to account for this.
Also, consider the annotation hereditary.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D7910762
fbshipit-source-id: 0df2c81
Summary:
Previously, the type of `trans_result` contained a list of SIL expressions.
However, most of the time we expect to get exactly one, and getting a different
number is a soft(!) error, usually returning `-1`.
This splits `trans_result` into `control`, which contains the information
needed for temporary computation (hence when we don't necessarily know the
return value yet), and a new version of `trans_result` that includes `control`,
the previous `exps` list but replaced by a single `return` expression instead,
and a couple other values that made sense to move out of `control`. This allows
some flexibility in the frontend compared to enforcing exactly one return
expression always: if they are not known yet we stick to `control` instead (see
eg `compute_controls_to_parent`).
This creates more garbage temporary identifiers, however they do not show up in
the final cfg. Instead, we see that temporary IDs are now often not
consecutive...
The most painful complication is in the treatment of `DeclRefExpr`, which was
actually returning *two* expressions: the method name and the `this` object.
Now the method name is a separate (optional) field in `trans_result`.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7881088
fbshipit-source-id: 41ad3b5
Summary: With the genrule approach, the directory the generated script is run from is inside `buck-out`. So we need to specify the project root before calling the `buck` command.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7938130
fbshipit-source-id: c265476
Summary:
This is an attempt to make things more consistent, and maybe save some work
from the `Format` module in case flambda doesn't have our backs.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D7775496
fbshipit-source-id: 59a6314
Summary: Without the class name, it is not always clear from the error message where the method expecing non-null parameters defined.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7919492
fbshipit-source-id: 044fb83
Summary: I needed it for debugging but, to my dismay, it was borked again. This time it was because `jbuilder` moved the object files to another directory since the last jbuilder update.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7926267
fbshipit-source-id: 42ad26a
Summary:
Make the starvation checker enabled by default.
Add a deadlock issue type, distinct to starvation, which will be kept for UI thread starvation.
Add checks so that checker will do nothing on non-Java code.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz, ddino
Differential Revision: D7908381
fbshipit-source-id: 889f373
Summary: Calling Future.get from UI thread, or under a lock the UI thread may try to take has been associated with ANRs.
Reviewed By: ddino
Differential Revision: D7859296
fbshipit-source-id: b87bd94
Summary: std::lock allows for locking multiple lockable objects, while avoiding deadlock. This will fix some FPs in C++.
Reviewed By: da319
Differential Revision: D7844198
fbshipit-source-id: 2b7140a
Summary: We were wrongly using the underapproximation of `min` rather than the overapproximation
Reviewed By: ddino
Differential Revision: D7844267
fbshipit-source-id: c9d9247
Summary:
This simplifies the frontends and backends in most cases. Before this diff,
returning `void` could be modelled either with a `None` return, or a dummy
return variable with type `Tvoid`. Now it's always the latter.
Reviewed By: sblackshear, dulmarod
Differential Revision: D7832938
fbshipit-source-id: 0a403d1
Summary:
The abstract interpreter tried to handle exceptional control-flow by propagating the *pre* of a block that threw an exception rather than the *post*.
This was a half-measure that isn't correct when an exception-throwing instruction isn't in the middle of a block.
The handling of exceptions wasn't actually used anywhere and was leading to further hacks in `ProcCfg`, so let's get rid of it.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz, jvillard
Differential Revision: D7843872
fbshipit-source-id: 2a4a815
Summary: Returning the list of sub-expressions is not right and can cause assertion failures elsewhere in the frontend.
Reviewed By: dulmarod
Differential Revision: D7813493
fbshipit-source-id: 33ac9c1
Summary:
We want instr-granular invariant maps so let's use the OneInstrPerNode CFG in the AI analyzers.
This requires specializing the TransferFunctions.
Keep using the normal CFG where we only need node-granular informations.
Depends on D7587241
Depends on D7608526
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D7618320
fbshipit-source-id: 73918f0
Summary:
When looking at large CFGs, at least in `xdot`, it's often difficult to find
the procedure you're looking for. Sorting the proc names puts them in
alphabetical order, which makes searching one procedure easier.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7758521
fbshipit-source-id: 8e9997f
Summary: We already suppress race reports if the field is marked in this way; makes sense to do the same thing for these reports.
Reviewed By: ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D7589275
fbshipit-source-id: 8f0aeab
Summary: Currently when we look for already abduced expression and find an assertion [exp|->strexp:typexp], we use typexp rather than strexp.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D7617193
fbshipit-source-id: c089720
Summary:
Run with `SHELL = bash -e -u -o pipefail` to catch many kinds of failures. We
were silently failing during `make install` because of some missing escaping,
and the failure was hidden because it was happening inside a bash `for` loop.
This fixes the escaping issue and makes sure such issues will result in an
error as of now.
Also removes dangerous `find -exec` instances: `find` will `exit 0` event if
some commands failed.
Fixes#887
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7569054
fbshipit-source-id: 542fe50
Summary:
This information is already available in the trace, and can contain absolute
paths to system includes (or infer's own clang runtime), which confuses the
diff analysis.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7534609
fbshipit-source-id: 5bd8f8b
Summary:
This can be noticed when the format of the DB changes, and other fun things
like that. No longer require to `make clean` to be able to pass these tests.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7533559
fbshipit-source-id: 670cb60
Summary:
It renames `eval_locs` to `eval_arr` and we use it for getting array block values the given input expressions are pointing to. For example, when given a program variable `x` as an input, `eval_arr` returns array blocks that `x` is pointing to, on the other hand, `eval` returns an abstract location of `x`.
Depends on D7471891
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7471915
fbshipit-source-id: b994944
Summary: In the pointer arithmetics, it returns top, if we cannot precisely follow the physical memory model, e.g., (&x + 1).
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7453510
fbshipit-source-id: db8738e
Summary:
Report nullable inconsistencies by relying on the bytecode, and not on the presence of analysis summary on disk.
This use the `--external-java-packages` to avoid reporting inconsistencies outside of the codebase.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D7481101
fbshipit-source-id: 281135d
Summary:
It's already turned of systematically for the Java integration, this just
generalises it. The Buck daemon seems to cause issues with infer from time to
time that are hard to debug.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D7400068
fbshipit-source-id: f05ee07
Summary:
If an aggregate `a` has a field `f` whose type has a constructor (e.g., `std::string`), we translate creating a local aggregate `A { "hi" }` as `string(&(a.f), "hi")`.
This diff makes sure that we recognize this as initializing `a`.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D7404624
fbshipit-source-id: 0ba90a7
Summary:
Show where the invalidation occurred in the trace.
Should make things easier to understand.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D7312182
fbshipit-source-id: 44ba9cc
Summary: This was causing false positives when returning the constant integer 0.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D7330143
fbshipit-source-id: 45d19dd
Summary: It adds an issue type, `BUFFER_OVERRUN_U5`, for alarms involving unknown values, i.e., when the trace set includes an unknown function call.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7178841
fbshipit-source-id: bfe857b
Summary:
At the moment, Java and Clang sources/sinks live in the same inferconfig entry.
If we try to parse a Java procedure that happens to be an invalid Clang qualified name (e.g., `MyClass.<init>`),
parsing will crash.
As a temporary fix, throw an exception and catch it instead.
In the future, we can avoid this by requiring that JSON source/sink specifications to indicate the language.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7291880
fbshipit-source-id: f8f4502
Summary:
Aggregate initialization (e.g., `S s{1, 2}`) doesn't invoke a contructor.
Our frontend translates aggregation initialization as assigning to each field in the struct.
To avoid the appearance of the struct being uninitialized, count any assignment to a field of an aggregate struct as initializing the struct.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D7189671
fbshipit-source-id: ace02fc
Summary:
Previously, `backend_stats` were getting logged correctly only when `infer analyze` was directly called, not `infer run`. Now, we report `backend_stats` directly, as part of the `iterate_callbacks` function in the task passed to the `ProcessPool`.
As a side benefit, `aggregated_stats` are also logged correctly now.
Reviewed By: dulmarod
Differential Revision: D7195525
fbshipit-source-id: fb2a400
Summary: It corrects a precision bug in the interval domain, with adding some test cases.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7230918
fbshipit-source-id: 3ec641a
Summary:
:
Previously, we did not have information about type of `exp` in `sizeof exp` from clang plugin which led to `Bad_footprint` errors. Infer did not understand `sizeof *p` in `struct Person* p = malloc(sizeof *p);` and used some default type.
This resulted in `Bad_footprint` error when trying to assign to a field `age` in `p->age=42;`.
This diff uses the version of clang plugin which exports the appropriate type information.
update-submodule: facebook-clang-plugins
Reviewed By: dulmarod
Differential Revision: D7179870
fbshipit-source-id: 4104f10
Summary:
Show some `SymAssign`s (corresponding to parameters) in the trace.
Depends on D7194448
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D7194479
fbshipit-source-id: 0deff6c
Summary: It corrects a bug that `&(x.f[n])` was evaluated to `&(x.f[0])`.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7179620
fbshipit-source-id: 04cbaa7
Summary: It simply resizes the target structure instead of allocating new heap memories and copying values.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7179353
fbshipit-source-id: 9c20f64
Summary: If a `Closure` expression `e` captures variable `x`, consider `e` as borrowing from `x`. When the closure is invoked via `operator()`, check that the borrow is still valid.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D7071839
fbshipit-source-id: d923a6a
Summary: It avoids that locations of array fields are evaluated to the `unknown` location incorrectly by addressing the case in the `eval_lindex` function.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7152736
fbshipit-source-id: 2dc825e
Summary: It collects array accesses from all sub expressions in commands.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7165098
fbshipit-source-id: 584dc80
Summary: It does not only malloc a new heap memory, but also copy its contents.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7152194
fbshipit-source-id: 58cba5e
Summary: This is to make sure than the analysis produces the same results independently from the order in which the members of a call cycle are analyzed.
Reviewed By: sblackshear, mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D6881971
fbshipit-source-id: 23872e1
Summary: Add a new command-line option `--external-java-packages` which allows the user to specify a list of Java package prefixes for external packages. Then the analysis will not report non-actionable warnings on those packages (e.g., inconsistent `Nullable` annotations in external packages).
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D7126960
fbshipit-source-id: c4f3c7c
Summary: When a property was defined in a protocol, we were not translating its attributes which leads to retain cycles false positives. This diff fixes it. It also refactors the code for translating fields a bit.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7136355
fbshipit-source-id: b5e7445
Summary:
Fairly simple approach here:
- If the RHS of an assignment is a frontend-generated temporary variable, assume it transfers ownership to the LHS variable
- If the RHS of an assignment is a program variable, assume that the LHS variable is borrowing from it.
- If we try to access a variable that has borrowed from a variable that is now invalid, complain.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D7069947
fbshipit-source-id: 99b8ee2
Summary:
At function calls, it copies a subset of heap memory that is newly
allocated by callees and is reachable from the return value.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7081425
fbshipit-source-id: 1ce777a
Summary:
This is to fix the conflicts between Eradicate and the Biabduction when reporting the same kind of errors: when Eradicate is on, the Eradicate warnings will have priority over the null deference reported by the biabduction.
If this approach proved to be successful in prod, I will refactor the reporting mechanism in the analysis itself to simply not report the null dereference in this case at all. For the codebases that aren't yet fully consistently using `Nullable`, this combined approach looks like a good way to deploy Infer toward full null safety.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7102119
fbshipit-source-id: 35d3add
Summary:
Before D7100561, the frontend translated capture-by-ref and capture-by-value in the same way.
Now we can tell the difference and report bugs in the capture-by-value case.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D7102214
fbshipit-source-id: e9d3ac7
Summary:
The `may_last_field` boolean value in the `decl_sym_val` function presents that the location *may* (not *must*) be a flexible array member.
By the modular analysis nature, it is impossible to determine whether a given argument is a flexible array member or not---because of lack of calling context. For example, there are two function calls of `foo` below: (2) passes a flexible array member as an argument and (1) passes a non-flexible array, however it is hard to notice when analyzing the `foo` function.
```
struct T {
int c[1];
};
struct S {
struct T a;
struct T b;
};
void foo(struct T x) { ... }
void goo () {
struct S* x = (struct S*)malloc(sizeof(struct S) + 10 * sizeof(int));
foo(&(x->a)); // (1)
foo(&(x->b)); // (2)
}
```
We assume that any given arguments may stem from the last field of struct, i.e., flexible array member. (This is why `decl_sym_val` is called with `may_last_field:true` at the first time.) With some tests, we noticed that the assumption does not harm the analysis precision, because whether regarding a parameter as a flexible array member or not is about using a symbolic array size instead of a constant array size written in the type during the analysis of callee. Therefore still it can raise correct alarms if the actual parameter is given in its caller.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7081295
fbshipit-source-id: a4d57a0
Summary:
Switch to the current stable branch for clang.
update-submodule: facebook-clang-plugins
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7067890
fbshipit-source-id: aedff90
Summary:
You can capture a variable by reference in a lambda, assign to it, and then invoke the lambda.
This looks like a dead store from the perspective of the current analysis.
This diff mitigates the problem by computing an additional analysis that tracks variables captured by ref at each program point.
It refuses to report a dead store on a variable that has already been captured by reference.
Later, we might want to incorporate the results of this analysis directly into the liveness analysis instead of just using it to gate reporting.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D7090291
fbshipit-source-id: 25eeffa
Summary:
Ran into this issue on Debian Testing, in which assert.h is probably different
due to a more recent toolchain. Without this change I get the following CFG
for `assert(e)`:
```
start
|-> prune (e) -> join
|-> prune (!e) -> __infer_fail("ASSERTION_FAILURE") -> exit
```
Notice that the first branch does not get to the exit, so infer must think that
the assertion is *always* violated, and reports `error: ASSERTION_FAILURE`.
This is broken.
Reviewed By: dulmarod
Differential Revision: D7067822
fbshipit-source-id: a2bf5ac
Summary:
It supports flexible array member using the following heuristic:
- a memory for a class is allocated by `malloc(sizeof(C) + n * sizeof(T))` format
- the last field of the class is an array
- the static size of the last field is one, i.e., `T field_name[1]`
When allocating and initializing members of classes, it sets the size of flexible array to `n+1` if the above conditions are met.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7056291
fbshipit-source-id: 31c5868
Summary:
The semantics of "placement new" is defined simply as an assignment.
For example, `C* x = new (y) C();` is analyzed as if `C* x = y;`.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7054007
fbshipit-source-id: 1c6754f
Summary:
The struct fields in Cil have been sorted for long time, however the
checkers do not seem to depend on the sortedness.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D7027858
fbshipit-source-id: 9e7ab96
Summary:
This commit improves precision of symbol instantiations.
When a return value of a callee is `[s1 + s2, _]` and if we want to
instantiate `s1` to `c3 + max(c4, s5)`, the lower bound was
substituted to `-oo` because our domain cannot express `c3 + max(c4,
s5) + s2`.
However, we can have instantiations that are preciser than `-oo`:
(1) `c3 + c4 + s2`
(2) or `c3 + s5 + s2`
because they are smaller than the ideal instantiation, `c3 + max(c4,
s5) + s2` and it is on the lower bound position.
For now, the implementation instantiates to (1) between the two ones,
because constant values introduced by `assert` or `assume`(`if`)
command are often used as safety conditions, e.g., `assert(index >=
0);` can place before array accesses. (We can change the stratege
later if we find that it doesn't work on some other cases.)
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D7020063
fbshipit-source-id: 62fb390
Summary:
A simple intraprocedural analysis that tracks when a storage location is read or deleted.
For now, this works only with local variable storage locations; field and array accesses are ignored.
In order to test this, I added a new "use-after-lifetime" warning. It complains when a variable is read or deleted after it has already been deleted.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D6961314
fbshipit-source-id: 75e95a2
Summary: We do not inject a destructor call if the destructor declaration does not contain a body in AST. We miss all the cases where the destructor is declared in `.h` file and defined in `.cpp` file as other files include `.h` file and do not contain the body of the destructor when destructor calls are being injected based on AST information. After this diff we inject destructor calls even if we do not have body for the destructor in AST.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D6796567
fbshipit-source-id: 1c187ec
Summary:
It prunes abstract memories on `assert` commands.
Problem: Since the assert command is sometimes translated to two
sequential `if` statments, it was not able to prune the memory
precisely at `assert` commands in Inferbo---the pruned memory at the
first branch was joined before the second branch.
Solution: To avoid losing the pruning information at the first branch,
now, it records which locations are pruned at the first branch and
applies the same pruning at the next branch if they have
semantically the same condition.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D6895919
fbshipit-source-id: 15ac1cb
Summary:
See comment--`Prop(resType = blah) myProp` will generate `.myProp`, `.myPropRes`, and `.myPropAttr`, and any of them can be used to set the prop.
Because our annotation parameter parsing is a bit primitive, handle this by simply checking the `Res` and `Attr` suffixes for every `Prop`.
This shouldn't lead to false negatives because these methods will only exist if the `resType` annotation is specified anyway.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D6955362
fbshipit-source-id: ec59b21
Summary: In Obj-C blocks, we explicitly insert reads of the captured vars. This does the same thing for C++. For example, `foo() { int x = 1; [x]() { return x; } }` would previously not contain a read of `x` in `foo`. Now, we'll create a temporary that reads from `x` and pass it to the closure value.
Reviewed By: dulmarod
Differential Revision: D6939997
fbshipit-source-id: f218afc
Summary:
1) Fixes some false negatives when a method annotated with `nullable` in the header is not annotated in the implementation and the attribute lookup returns the implementation. In that case, we should follow the information given in the header.
2) Fixes some false positives when annotations are in the other way around, i.e. annotated in the implementation but not in the headers. For now, there should be no report in this case, but the analysis should be extended to report the inconsistency between the header and the implementation
3) Fixes some cases of weird reports caused by name conflicts where the method in the include has the same name has another method annotated differently.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D6935379
fbshipit-source-id: 3577eb0
Summary:
Added a check for recursive calls not to add abduced reference parameters constraints. Abduced reference parameters constraints were causing assertion failure when renaming variables in specs, in particular, when transforming variables into callee variables.
A similar check is already in place for abduced retvals constraints.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D6856919
fbshipit-source-id: acfe840
Summary:
This allows Eradicate to lookup the annotations from the classpath and without requiring the code in the classpath to have been previously analyzed. The benefit is that source files can be analyzed independently of each other as long as the classpath is known.
The main goal is to run be able to run Eradicate as a linter without losing warnings.
We may have to add some more models of the standard libraries as no `Nullable` on a parameter does not necessarily mean that the method does not accept `null`.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D6921720
fbshipit-source-id: f525269
Summary:
- Combine two fields from ProcAttributes.t into a single field `method_kind` with more information
- New field details whether the procedure is an `OBJC_INSTANCE`, `CPP_INSTANCE`, `OBJ_CLASS`, `CPP_CLASS`, `BLOCK`, or `C_FUNCTION`
- `is_objc_instance_method` and `is_cpp_instance_method` fields no longer necessary
- Changed `is_instance` field in CMethod_signature to `method_kind` field of type ProcAttributes.method_kind
Reviewed By: dulmarod
Differential Revision: D6884402
fbshipit-source-id: 4b916c3
Summary:
Record "capture phases" in the runstate and in the source files table of the
database. Use this instead of filesystem timestamps to decide which files need
re-analyzing in the reactive analysis.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D6760833
fbshipit-source-id: 7955621
Summary:
The boolean lock domain is simple and surprisingly effective.
But it's starting to cause false positives in the case where locks are nested.
Releasing the inner lock also releases the outer lock.
This diff introduces a new locks domain: a map of locks (access paths) to a bounded count representing an underapproximation of the number of times the lock has been acquired.
For now, we just use a single dummy access path to represent all locks (and thus a count actually would have been sufficiently expressive; we don't need the map yet).
But I'm planning to remove this limitation in a follow-up by refactoring the lock models to give us an access path.
Knowing the names of locks could be useful for error messages and suggesting fixes.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D6182006
fbshipit-source-id: 6624971
Summary:
Previously, we could understand than an access was safe either because it was possibly owned or protected by a thread/lock, but not both. If an access was both protected by a lock and rooted in a paramer (i.e., possibly owned), we would forget the ownership part of the precondition and remember only the lock bit. This leads to false positives in cases where an access protected by a lock is owned, but another unowned access to the same memory is not protected by a lock (see the new `unownedLockedWriteOk` E2E test for an example).
This diff makes access safety conditions disjunctive so we can simultaneously track whether an access is owned and whether an access is protected by a thread/lock. This will fix false positives like the one explained in T24015160.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D6671489
fbshipit-source-id: d17715f
Summary:
We already knew not to warn when non-resource `Closeable`'s like `ByteArrayOutputStream` weren't closed, but we still warned on their subtypes.
This diff fixes that problem by checking subclasses in the frontend.
This also removes the need for Java source code models of non-resource types, so I removed them.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D6843413
fbshipit-source-id: 60fe7fb
Summary: The heuristics to determine the end of a block/procedure was too brittle, the new one ignores non significant instructions.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D6845380
fbshipit-source-id: feab557
Summary:
The infer results directories in buck-out/ are "cleaned up" to avoid polluting
the Buck cache with too much data or non-deterministic data. In particular, the
runstate is deleted, which confused subsequent infer processes trying to read
the pre-existing results directory.
Add a special case in infer to delete pre-existing results directories in
buck-out instead of trying to load their state.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D6845128
fbshipit-source-id: 5c716aa
Summary:
This diff fixes the translation of `new` and `placement new` with one argument. If `placement new` has more than one argument it means that it is user-defined (this will be addressed in another diff).
update-submodule: facebook-clang-plugins
Reviewed By: sblackshear, mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D6807751
fbshipit-source-id: 7cf0290
Summary: This should allow to report several occurences of the an issue appearing several times within the same method.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D6783298
fbshipit-source-id: 5555906
Summary:
This lets us fix the limitation of reporting false positives when a `private` function calls `build()` on a parameter without passing all of the required props.
We will now report such issues in the caller only if it fails to pass the required props.
An unfortunate consequence of this change is that we lose track of where the actual call to `build` occurs--we now report on the declaration of the caller function rather than on the call site of `build`.
I'll work on addressing that in a follow-up.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D6764153
fbshipit-source-id: 3b173e5
Summary:
The captured variables of a closure are tuples (id, var, typ) with the implicit assumption
that &var -> id holds in the heap. This is true when the closure is created, but is not enforce otherwise.
This becomes a problem when the closure is stored in the heap, goes passed a bi-abduction, and then it's executed
(see new test). This was failing before this diff and now succeeds.
We add the verification of this constraint to the normalization of sigma.
At the moment I expect Precondition_not_met to be removed, but also later, we will be able to compute retain cycles
over the closures, as the correct captured variable info is kept through the execution.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D6796525
fbshipit-source-id: a8a7655
Summary:
Not sure what an "iCFG" is but the dotty is only about CFGs anyway.
Diff obtained by mass-`sed`.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D6324280
fbshipit-source-id: b7603bb
Summary: At each call to `Component$Builder.build()`, checks that the required props for `Component` have been set via prior calls to the `Builder`. Does not yet handle `Prop(optional = true)`, but will address that in a follow-up.
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D6735524
fbshipit-source-id: 0c812fd
Summary:
Record the db schema, infer version, and run dates into
infer-out/.infer_runstate.json. This allows us to check on startup whether the
results directory was generated using a compatible version of infer or not, and
give a better error message in the latter case than some SQLite error about
mismatching tables.
This will be used in a follow-up diff to record capture phases too, and avoid
relying on filesystem timestamps of the infer-out/capture/foo/ directories for
reactive analysis.
Had to change some tests Makefiles to make sure they do not attempt to re-use
stale infer-out directories, which would now fail the run.
The stale infer-out directory gets deleted if `--force-delete-results-dir` is
passed (but a warning still gets printed).
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D6760787
fbshipit-source-id: f36f7df
Summary:
Previously imports with relative filenames would not get resolved so the result
would depend on where infer had been run from. Usually this was the project
root. Now, resolve path names of imports relative to the file doing the
`#IMPORT`. This changes behaviour most of the time.
Reviewed By: dulmarod
Differential Revision: D6784740
fbshipit-source-id: 4ccb7bf
Summary:
This changes the syntax for AL imports from `#IMPORT <file>` to `#IMPORT
"file"`. As a side-effect, the `file` part is now lex'd more permissively too.
Reviewed By: dulmarod
Differential Revision: D6784669
fbshipit-source-id: cc1bb73
Summary:
In Java, static variables are distinguished by package/class:
the file where they are defined doesn't matter.
Fixes#831.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/infer/pull/833
Reviewed By: jeremydubreil
Differential Revision: D6661240
Pulled By: sblackshear
fbshipit-source-id: beeb2f9