baloghadamsoftware marked an inline comment as not done.
baloghadamsoftware added inline comments.


================
Comment at: lib/StaticAnalyzer/Checkers/IteratorChecker.cpp:605
+  if (Pos && !Pos->isValid()) {
+    // If I do not put a tag here, some invalidation tests will fail
+    static CheckerProgramPointTag Tag("InvalidatedIteratorChecker",
----------------
NoQ wrote:
> baloghadamsoftware wrote:
> > NoQ wrote:
> > > This needs investigation, because it may be nasty.
> > > 
> > > `generateNonFatalErrorNode()` returns null when the exact same non-fatal 
> > > error node, also produced by the iterator checker with the exact same 
> > > program state and exact same program point and exact same tag on the 
> > > program point already exists. As far as i understand, the only difference 
> > > your tag makes is that the tag is now different, so it is not merged with 
> > > the existing node. However, it is worth it to try to find out why the 
> > > node gets merged at all.
> > > 
> > > This may be caused by an accidental state split. For example, if you are 
> > > calling `generateNonFatalErrorNode()` twice in the same checker callback 
> > > without chaining them together (passing node returned by one as an 
> > > argument to another), this in fact splits states. I'm not immediately 
> > > seeing such places in the code - you seem to be aware of this problem and 
> > > avoiding it well. But still, looking at the topology of the exploded 
> > > graph in the failing test should help finding out what is going on.
> > I made some more investigation this time. Unfortunately the case is not 
> > what you suggest. Only one non-fatal error node is produced. I tested it 
> > with a common tag (a global static so the tag is exactly the same at every 
> > `generateNonFatalErrorNode()`, but the tests still pass. I printed out the 
> > exploded graph and I found that there are indeed two nodes with the same 
> > state ID. The tag is the default tag automatically generated from the name 
> > of the checker. The first state is created in function 
> > `checkPreStatement()` for `CXXOperatorCallExpr` where I copy the state of 
> > the iterator from the formal to the actual `this` parameter. All the test 
> > fails happen at the dereference operator call (`*`) of another operator 
> > call (`++` or `--`). After this copy, when I call 
> > `generateNonFatalErrorNode()` I get `nullptr` because at some point under 
> > the hood (I debugged it when I created it originally) the error node is 
> > considered as "not new". If I use a custom tag here, the state ID remains, 
> > not the node ID changes.
> I think i see the problem. The checker subscribes to both `PreCall` and 
> `PreStmt<CallExpr>` (to be exact, `CXXOperatorCallExpr`) and adds transitions 
> in both cases. It results with a predecessor node in `CheckerContext` that's 
> already tagged by the checker. Apparently this never worked, but nobody tried 
> that.
> 
> Ideally, we should make sure those callbacks use different program points, 
> eg. introduce `PreCall`/`PostCall` program point kinds and use them.
> 
> Also i wonder why are you using pre- rather than post-statement callback. You 
> model all other operators in `PostCall`, why did those end up here? Maybe 
> merge them? It is generally better to model pre-conditions and look for bugs 
> in `PreStmt`/`PreCall` (before we don't care what happens within the call), 
> and model effects in `PostStmt`/`PostCall` (because effects don't take effect 
> until the call happens).
That is what I am trying to to: `Post*` for modelling and `Pre*` for checking. 
However, this `PreStmt<CXXOperatorCallExpr>()` is special since I have to move 
the arguments to the context of the called operator //before// the call.


https://reviews.llvm.org/D32747



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