Summary: We don't use allocation costs in prod at the moment. There is no plan to do so in the near future. Let's not report them anymore and also save some space in `costs-report.json`.
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D19766828
fbshipit-source-id: 06dffa61d
Summary:
Let's introduce a set of new cost analysis issue types that are raised when the function is statically determined to run on the UI thread. For this, we rely on the existing `runs_on_ui_thread` check that is developed for RacerD. We also update the cost summary and `jsonbug.cost_item` to include whether a method is on the ui thread so that we don't repeatedly compute this at diff time for complexity increase issues.
Note that `*_UI_THREAD` cost issues are assumed to be more strict than `*_COLD_START` reports at the moment. Next, we can also consider adding a new issue type that combines both such as `*_UI_THREAD_AND_COLD_START` (i.e. for methods that are both on cold start and run on ui thread).
Reviewed By: ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D18428408
fbshipit-source-id: f18805716
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:
There's a lot of code for building up and moving around `Tags`.
When working on cleaning up some of the `Errlog` code, I noticed that `Tags` were included in the JSON and wondered why.
The answer is suprisingly just one thing: only the line tags get used, and even then they are only used to decide what frame to select as the start frame for the trace (i.e., the one that is highlighted first).
That seems like overkill; starting on trace on the actual line where the error occurs, starting at the beginning of the procedure where the error occurs, or starting at the first line of the trace all seem equally reasonable.
If we are happy with any of these alternatives, we can kill `Tags` altogether and potentially save a decent amount space in our JSON artifacts.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D6876752
fbshipit-source-id: 1580127
Summary:
Deduping issues when generating a single report and then diffing the
reports can lead to introduced issues being considered duplicates of
existing issues.
Reviewed By: sblackshear
Differential Revision: D6414673
fbshipit-source-id: bba81fd
Summary:
This diff takes the first step toward a more general filtering
system. This step is concerned only with filtering at the reporting
stage, filtering for the capture and analysis stages is left for
later.
This diff adds a new command line / config option
```
--filter-report +string
Specify a filter for issues to report. If multiple filters are
specified, they are applied in the order in which they are
specified. Each filter is applied to each issue detected, and only
issues which are accepted by all filters are reported. Each filter
is of the form:
`<issue_type_regex>:<filename_regex>:<reason_string>`. The first
two components are OCaml Str regular expressions, with an optional
`!` character prefix. If a regex has a `!` prefix, the polarity is
inverted, and the filter becomes a "blacklist" instead of a
"whitelist". Each filter is interpreted as an implication: an issue
matches if it does not match the `issue_type_regex` or if it does
match the `filename_regex`. The filenames that are tested by the
regex are relative to the `--project-root` directory. The
`<reason_string>` is a non-empty string used to explain why the
issue was filtered.
See also infer-report(1) and infer-run(1).
```
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D6182486
fbshipit-source-id: 9d3922b
Summary:
This simplifies the jbuild files: no need to list these files explicitly
anymore, nor to exclude them explicitly from the main `InferModules` library
(due to their different compilation flags).
Isolate common parts into jbuild.common do `cat`-based code inclusion into
jbuild files to factorize code.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D5678328
fbshipit-source-id: 6d7d925