Summary:
Developers complain when a function that used to only throw an exception has complexity increase in the updated revision. Let's suppress such issues by giving those functions 0 cost which is already suppressed by differential reporting.
One common case to the above throw pattern is Java methods that throw an unsupported implementation exception for a functionality that has not been implemented yet. When the developer adds the supported implementation, we don't want to warn them with complexity increase since they are adding new functionality.
This is a design choice/heuristic to prevent noisy results for now.
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D25495151
fbshipit-source-id: 94a82b062
Summary: D17500386 had added the ability to give symbolic values on functions returning exceptions. However, this might cause FPs or cryptic complexity reports (especially with subclass heuristics). This diff aims to revert it back.
Reviewed By: skcho
Differential Revision: D22764266
fbshipit-source-id: 1615544d8
Summary: This diff returns non-symbolic value (top) for unknown external function calls because the symbolic values sometimes make it hard to understand costs.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D18685715
fbshipit-source-id: 1b39c718b
Summary:
This diff avoids making top values on unknown non-static function,
such as abstract function, calls. This is necessary because the
generated top values ruin the precision of the cost checker.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D17418611
fbshipit-source-id: aeb759bdd
Summary:
This diff generates a symbolic value when a function returns only
exceptions. Previously, the exception expression is evaluated to top,
thus it was propagated to other functions, which made those costs as
top. For preventing that situation, this diff changed:
* exception expressions are evaluated to bottom, and
* if callee's return value is bottom, it generates a symbolic value
for it.
Reviewed By: ezgicicek
Differential Revision: D17500386
fbshipit-source-id: 0fdcc710d
Summary:
It materializes symbolic values of function parameters on-demand. The on-demand materialization is triggered when finding a value from an abstract memory and joining/widening abstract memories.
Depends on D13294630
Main idea:
* Symbolic values are on-demand-ly generated by a symbol path and its type
* In order to avoid infinite generation of symbolic values, symbol paths are canonicalized by structure types and field names (which means they are abstracted to the same value). For example, in a linked list, a symbolic value `x->next->next` is canonicalized to `x->next` when the structures (`*x` and `*x->next`) have the same structure type and the same field name (`next`).
Changes from the previous code:
* `Symbol.t` does not include `id` and `pname` for distinguishing symbols. Now, all symbols are compared by `path:SymbolPath.partial` and `bound_end`.
* `SymbolTable` is no longer used, which was used for generating symbolic values with new `id`s.
Reviewed By: mbouaziz
Differential Revision: D13294635
fbshipit-source-id: fa422f084