LHS type and the computation result type; this encodes information into
the AST which is otherwise non-obvious. Fix Sema to always come up with the
right answer for both of these types. Fix IRGen and the analyzer to
account for these changes. This fixes PR2601. The approach is inspired
by PR2601 comment 2.
Note that this changes real *= complex in CodeGen from a silent
miscompilation to an explicit error.
I'm not really sure that the analyzer changes are correct, or how to
test them... someone more familiar with the analyzer should check those
changes.
llvm-svn: 67889
Zhongxing and I discussed by email.
Main changes:
- Removed SymIntConstraintVal and SymIntConstraint
- Added SymExpr as a parent class to SymbolData, SymSymExpr, SymIntExpr
- Added nonloc::SymExprVal to wrap SymExpr
- SymbolRef is now just a typedef of 'const SymbolData*'
- Bunch of minor code cleanups in how some methods were invoked (no functionality change)
This changes are part of a long-term plan to have full symbolic expression
trees. This will be useful for lazily evaluating complicated expressions.
llvm-svn: 67731
- Conjure symbols at '--' and '++' unary operations
- Add utility method SVal::GetConjuredSymbolVal() and constify some arguments
along the way.
llvm-svn: 67395
conditions. Currently the analyzer does not reason well about
promotions/truncations of symbolic values, so at branch conditions when we see:
if (condition)
and condition is something like a 'short' or 'char', essentially ignore the
promotion to 'int' so that we track constraints on the original symbolic value.
We only ignore the casts if the underlying type has the same or fewer bits as
the converted type.
This fixes:
<rdar://problem/6619921>
llvm-svn: 66899
path-sensitivity, beyond checking to see if the value is "unknown" also check if
the ConstraintManager can handle the SVal. This allows us to recover some
path-sensitivity by actually discarding some information.
llvm-svn: 66627
giving them rough classifications (normal types, never-canonical
types, always-dependent types, abstract type representations) and
making it far easier to make sure that we've hit all of the cases when
decoding types.
Switched some switch() statements on the type class over to using this
mechanism, and filtering out those things we don't care about. For
example, CodeGen should never see always-dependent or non-canonical
types, while debug info generation should never see always-dependent
types. More switch() statements on the type class need to be moved
over to using this approach, so that we'll get warnings when we add a
new type then fail to account for it somewhere in the compiler.
As part of this, some types have been renamed:
TypeOfExpr -> TypeOfExprType
FunctionTypeProto -> FunctionProtoType
FunctionTypeNoProto -> FunctionNoProtoType
There shouldn't be any functionality change...
llvm-svn: 65591
expressions of the form: 'short x = (y != 10);' While we handle 'int x = (y !=
10)' lazily, the cast to another integer type currently loses the symbolic
constraint. Eager evaluation of the constraint causes the paths to bifurcate and
eagerly evaluate 'y != 10' to a constant of 1 or 0. This should address
<rdar://problem/6619921> until we have a better (more lazy approach) for
handling promotions/truncations of symbolic integer values.
llvm-svn: 65480
analyzer for array subscript expressions involving bases that are vectors. This
solution is probably a hack: it gets the lvalue of the vector instead of an
rvalue like all other types. This should be reviewed (big FIXME in
GRExprEngine).
llvm-svn: 65366
about, whether they are builtins or not. Use this to add the
appropriate "format" attribute to NSLog, NSLogv, asprintf, and
vasprintf, and to translate builtin attributes (from Builtins.def)
into actual attributes on the function declaration.
Use the "printf" format attribute on function declarations to
determine whether we should do format string checking, rather than
looking at an ad hoc list of builtins and "known" function names.
Be a bit more careful about when we consider a function a "builtin" in
C++.
llvm-svn: 64561
- Added a new 'node builder' class called GRStmtNodeBuilderRef (name may
change). This is essentially a smart reference to a GRStmtNodeBuilder object
that keeps track of the current context (predecessor node, GRExprEngine
object, etc.) The idea is to gradually simplify the interface between
GRExprEngine and GRTransferFuncs using this new builder (i.e., passing 1
argument instead of 5). It also handles some of the "auto-transition" for node
creation, simplifying some of the logic in GRExprEngine itself.
- Used GRStmtBuilderRef to replace GRTransferFuncs::EvalStore with
GRTransferFuncs::EvalBind. The new EvalBind method will be used at any
arbitrary places where a binding between a location and value takes place.
Moreover, GRTransferFuncs no longer has the responsibility to request
StoreManager to do the binding; this is now in GRExprEngine::EvalBind. All
GRTransferFuncs::EvalBind does is checker-specific logic (which can be a
no-op).
llvm-svn: 64525
etc.) when we perform name lookup on them. This ensures that we
produce the correct signature for these functions, which has two
practical impacts:
1) When we're supporting the "implicit function declaration" feature
of C99, these functions will be implicitly declared with the right
signature rather than as a function returning "int" with no
prototype. See PR3541 for the reason why this is important (hint:
GCC always predeclares these functions).
2) If users attempt to redeclare one of these library functions with
an incompatible signature, we produce a hard error.
This patch does a little bit of work to give reasonable error
messages. For example, when we hit case #1 we complain that we're
implicitly declaring this function with a specific signature, and then
we give a note that asks the user to include the appropriate header
(e.g., "please include <stdlib.h> or explicitly declare 'malloc'"). In
case #2, we show the type of the implicit builtin that was incorrectly
declared, so the user can see the problem. We could do better here:
for example, when displaying this latter error message we say
something like:
'strcpy' was implicitly declared here with type 'char *(char *, char
const *)'
but we should really print out a fake code line showing the
declaration, like this:
'strcpy' was implicitly declared here as:
char *strcpy(char *, char const *)
This would also be good for printing built-in candidates with C++
operator overloading.
The set of C library functions supported by this patch includes all
functions from the C99 specification's <stdlib.h> and <string.h> that
(a) are predefined by GCC and (b) have signatures that could cause
codegen issues if they are treated as functions with no prototype
returning and int. Future work could extend this set of functions to
other C library functions that we know about.
llvm-svn: 64504
- Add 'EvalBind', which will be used by 'EvalStore' to pull much of the value binding logic out of GRTransferFuncs.
- Rename many cases of 'St' to 'state'.
llvm-svn: 64426
the ownership of BugTypes and BugReports. Now BugReports are owned by BugTypes,
and BugTypes are owned by the BugReporter object.
The major functionality change in this patch is that reports are not immediately
emitted by a call to BugReporter::EmitWarning (now called EmitReport), but
instead of queued up in report "equivalence classes". When
BugReporter::FlushReports() is called, it emits one diagnostic per report
equivalence class. This provides a nice cleanup with the caching of reports as
well as enables the BugReporter engine to select the "best" path for reporting a
path-sensitive bug based on all the locations in the ExplodedGraph that the same
bug could occur.
Along with this patch, Leaks are now coalesced into a common equivalence class
by their allocation site, and the "summary" diagnostic for leaks now reports the
allocation site as the location of the bug (this may later be augmented to also
provide an example location where the leak occurs).
llvm-svn: 63796
makes it clear to clients that they have to pick an instantiation
or spelling location before calling it and allows optimization based
on that.
llvm-svn: 63698
type" rather than the C definition. We do this because both C99 and
Clang always use "aggregate type" as "aggregate or union type", and
the C++ definition includes union types.
llvm-svn: 63395
that every declaration lives inside a DeclContext.
Moved several things that don't have names but were ScopedDecls (and,
therefore, NamedDecls) to inherit from Decl rather than NamedDecl,
including ObjCImplementationDecl and LinkageSpecDecl. Now, we don't
store empty DeclarationNames for these things, nor do we try to insert
them into DeclContext's lookup structure.
The serialization tests are temporarily disabled. We'll re-enable them
once we've sorted out the remaining ownership/serialiazation issues
between DeclContexts and TranslationUnion, DeclGroups, etc.
llvm-svn: 62562
information for declarations that were referenced via a qualified-id,
e.g., N::C::value. We keep track of the location of the start of the
nested-name-specifier. Note that the difference between
QualifiedDeclRefExpr and DeclRefExpr does have an effect on the
semantics of function calls in two ways:
1) The use of a qualified-id instead of an unqualified-id suppresses
argument-dependent lookup
2) If the name refers to a virtual function, the qualified-id
version will call the function determined statically while the
unqualified-id version will call the function determined dynamically
(by looking up the appropriate function in the vtable).
Neither of these features is implemented yet, but we do print out
qualified names for QualifiedDeclRefExprs as part of the AST printing.
llvm-svn: 61789