Summary: Since there is no discernible downside in using the write daemon unless in single-thread mode or in buck, make it only depend on these circumstances, not a command line flag.
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D23004451
fbshipit-source-id: 5c1d06ed1
Summary:
The full inventory of everything in infer-out/. The main change is
around "issues directories": instead of registering them dynamically
they are now all declared statically (well, they kind of were already in
Config.ml).
Reviewed By: ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D20894305
fbshipit-source-id: 1a06ec09d
Summary:
This diff enables parsing and auto-formatting documentation
comments (aka docstrings).
I have looked at this entire diff and manually made some changes to
improve the formatting. In some cases it looked like it would take too
much time, or benefit from someone more familiar with the code doing
it, and I instead disabled auto-formatting docstrings in those files.
Also, there are some source files where the docstrings are invalid,
and some where the structure detected by the parser appears not to
match what was intended. Auto-formatting has been disabled for these
files.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D18755888
fbshipit-source-id: 68d72465d
Summary:
- Instead of merging one target DB into the main DB at a time, merge all target DBs into an in-memory DB (thus, no writing) and then dump it into the main DB at the end. This makes merging faster.
- When using the sqlite write daemon, there is no reason to drive the merge process from the master, sending each individual target to merge down the socket and doing one DB merge at a time. Here we move all the DB merging logic in the daemon, and expose a single function that does it all.
- Refactor some common functionality (notably the `iter_infer_deps` function is now in `Utils`) and remove dead files.
This can be also done using a temporary DB (which is not limited to memory) but this showed worse perf in tests than the in-memory solution as well as the current state of things (! possibly Sqlite-version related?).
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D17182862
fbshipit-source-id: a6f81937d
Summary:
There is currently a bug in incremental analysis because the capture data is not reset once the specs files have been invalidated. This has caused a problem where cost issues that should be reported are not spotted. I'm introducing this method so I can use it to fix incremental analysis.
This method is resurrected from D16602417
Reviewed By: ngorogiannis
Differential Revision: D17184401
fbshipit-source-id: e84925324
Summary:
In integrations where the capturing process isn't forked off the main Infer process, but launched, eg, via a script pretending to be a compiler, the reference indicating whether the server is running will always be false, and thus such integrations will never try to connect to the write daemon.
Fix this by
- making `sqlite-write-daemon` authoritative wrt connecting to the daemon.
- launching the daemon earlier in the setup process.
Reviewed By: jberdine
Differential Revision: D17204002
fbshipit-source-id: 23d452fac
Summary:
Implementation of write-serializer for Sqlite. Points of note:
- A Unix socket is used for communication. This avoids buffer-size limitations, as the objects we send for writing may exceed said limits.
- No daemon is used if running under buck or in genrule mode, as this usually means a single-threaded job capturing into the DB.
- When the daemon is running, read-only access is *not* enforced for other processes. This makes starting and stopping the daemon during Infer execution easier and more robust. In WAL mode this should not have any effect on performance.
- This version is not economical with connections, it uses one per query, todo.
Reviewed By: jvillard
Differential Revision: D17077183
fbshipit-source-id: fa9877d6c
Summary: Developing the Sqlite-writer process further, a type `command` is introduced, which will used for sending instructions down a communications channel to the daemon. For now, the commands are interpreted locally.
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D16985056
fbshipit-source-id: 2aa20908d
Summary:
Write contention is becoming a problem in parallel capture (eg when make runs with high parallelism) or when analysis writes CFGs to the DB in parallel (eg when analysing blocks in ObC). This is believed to lead to BUSY errors in Sqlite.
This is step 1 of a process where all writes are cordoned-off in one module, and fixing the interface for that module.
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D16985034
fbshipit-source-id: 3d7ce381b