| ============ |
| Debug Checks |
| ============ |
| |
| .. contents:: |
| :local: |
| |
| The analyzer contains a number of checkers which can aid in debugging. Enable |
| them by using the "-analyzer-checker=" flag, followed by the name of the |
| checker. |
| |
| |
| General Analysis Dumpers |
| ======================== |
| |
| These checkers are used to dump the results of various infrastructural analyses |
| to stderr. Some checkers also have "view" variants, which will display a graph |
| using a 'dot' format viewer (such as Graphviz on OS X) instead. |
| |
| - debug.DumpCallGraph, debug.ViewCallGraph: Show the call graph generated for |
| the current translation unit. This is used to determine the order in which to |
| analyze functions when inlining is enabled. |
| |
| - debug.DumpCFG, debug.ViewCFG: Show the CFG generated for each top-level |
| function being analyzed. |
| |
| - debug.DumpDominators: Shows the dominance tree for the CFG of each top-level |
| function. |
| |
| - debug.DumpLiveVars: Show the results of live variable analysis for each |
| top-level function being analyzed. |
| |
| |
| Path Tracking |
| ============= |
| |
| These checkers print information about the path taken by the analyzer engine. |
| |
| - debug.DumpCalls: Prints out every function or method call encountered during a |
| path traversal. This is indented to show the call stack, but does NOT do any |
| special handling of branches, meaning different paths could end up |
| interleaved. |
| |
| - debug.DumpTraversal: Prints the name of each branch statement encountered |
| during a path traversal ("IfStmt", "WhileStmt", etc). Currently used to check |
| whether the analysis engine is doing BFS or DFS. |
| |
| |
| State Checking |
| ============== |
| |
| These checkers will print out information about the analyzer state in the form |
| of analysis warnings. They are intended for use with the -verify functionality |
| in regression tests. |
| |
| - debug.TaintTest: Prints out the word "tainted" for every expression that |
| carries taint. At the time of this writing, taint was only introduced by the |
| checks under experimental.security.taint.TaintPropagation; this checker may |
| eventually move to the security.taint package. |
| |
| - debug.ExprInspection: Responds to certain function calls, which are modeled |
| after builtins. These function calls should affect the program state other |
| than the evaluation of their arguments; to use them, you will need to declare |
| them within your test file. The available functions are described below. |
| |
| (FIXME: debug.ExprInspection should probably be renamed, since it no longer only |
| inspects expressions.) |
| |
| |
| ExprInspection checks |
| --------------------- |
| |
| - void clang_analyzer_eval(bool); |
| |
| Prints TRUE if the argument is known to have a non-zero value, FALSE if the |
| argument is known to have a zero or null value, and UNKNOWN if the argument |
| isn't sufficiently constrained on this path. You can use this to test other |
| values by using expressions like "x == 5". Note that this functionality is |
| currently DISABLED in inlined functions, since different calls to the same |
| inlined function could provide different information, making it difficult to |
| write proper -verify directives. |
| |
| In C, the argument can be typed as 'int' or as '_Bool'. |
| |
| Example usage:: |
| |
| clang_analyzer_eval(x); // expected-warning{{UNKNOWN}} |
| if (!x) return; |
| clang_analyzer_eval(x); // expected-warning{{TRUE}} |
| |
| |
| - void clang_analyzer_checkInlined(bool); |
| |
| If a call occurs within an inlined function, prints TRUE or FALSE according to |
| the value of its argument. If a call occurs outside an inlined function, |
| nothing is printed. |
| |
| The intended use of this checker is to assert that a function is inlined at |
| least once (by passing 'true' and expecting a warning), or to assert that a |
| function is never inlined (by passing 'false' and expecting no warning). The |
| argument is technically unnecessary but is intended to clarify intent. |
| |
| You might wonder why we can't print TRUE if a function is ever inlined and |
| FALSE if it is not. The problem is that any inlined function could conceivably |
| also be analyzed as a top-level function (in which case both TRUE and FALSE |
| would be printed), depending on the value of the -analyzer-inlining option. |
| |
| In C, the argument can be typed as 'int' or as '_Bool'. |
| |
| Example usage:: |
| |
| int inlined() { |
| clang_analyzer_checkInlined(true); // expected-warning{{TRUE}} |
| return 42; |
| } |
| |
| void topLevel() { |
| clang_analyzer_checkInlined(false); // no-warning (not inlined) |
| int value = inlined(); |
| // This assertion will not be valid if the previous call was not inlined. |
| clang_analyzer_eval(value == 42); // expected-warning{{TRUE}} |
| } |
| |
| |
| Statistics |
| ========== |
| |
| The debug.Stats checker collects various information about the analysis of each |
| function, such as how many blocks were reached and if the analyzer timed out. |
| |
| There is also an additional -analyzer-stats flag, which enables various |
| statistics within the analyzer engine. Note the Stats checker (which produces at |
| least one bug report per function) may actually change the values reported by |
| -analyzer-stats. |