NoQ added inline comments.
================ Comment at: lib/StaticAnalyzer/Checkers/IteratorPastEndChecker.cpp:530 + auto value = RVal; + if (auto loc = value.getAs<Loc>()) { + value = State->getRawSVal(*loc); ---------------- baloghadamsoftware wrote: > NoQ wrote: > > baloghadamsoftware wrote: > > > NoQ wrote: > > > > baloghadamsoftware wrote: > > > > > NoQ wrote: > > > > > > Is there a test case for this hack? > > > > > > > > > > > > I'd also consider inspecting the AST (probably before passing the > > > > > > values to `handleRandomIncrOrDecr()`) and making the decision based > > > > > > on that. Because even though this pattern ("if a value is a loc and > > > > > > we expect a nonloc, do an extra dereference") is present in many > > > > > > places in the analyzer, in most of these places it doesn't work > > > > > > correctly (what if we try to discriminate between `int*` and > > > > > > `int*&`?). > > > > > I just want to get the sign of the integer value (if it is > > > > > available). It turned out that I cannot do comparison between loc and > > > > > nonloc. (Strange, because I can do anything else). After I created > > > > > this hack, the Analyzer did not crash anymore on the llvm/clang code. > > > > > > > > > > I do not fully understand what I should fix here and how? In this > > > > > particular place we expect some integer, thus no int* or int*&. > > > > Loc value, essentially, *is* a pointer or reference value. If you're > > > > getting a Loc, then your expectations of an integer are not met in the > > > > actual code. In this case you *want* to know why they are not met, > > > > otherwise you may avoid the crash, but do incorrect things and run into > > > > false positives. So i'd rather have this investigated carefully. > > > > > > > > You say that you are crashing otherwise - and then it should be trivial > > > > for you to attach a debugger and `dump()` the expression for which you > > > > expect to take the integer value, and see why it suddenly has a pointer > > > > type in a particular case. From that you'd easily see what to do. > > > > > > > > Also, crashes are often easy to auto-reduce using tools like `creduce`. > > > > Unlike false positives, which may turn into true positives during > > > > reduction. > > > > > > > > If you still don't see the reason why your workaround is necessary and > > > > what exactly it does, could you attach a preprocessed file and an > > > > analyzer runline for the crash, so that we could have a look together? > > > Just to be clear: I know why it crashes without the hack: I simply cannot > > > compare loc and nonloc. Since concrete 0 is nonloc I need another nonloc. > > > I suppose this happens if an integer reference is passed to the operator > > > +, +=, - or -=. So I thought that dereferencing it by getting the raw > > > SVal is the correct thing to do. > > Yep, in this case the correct thing to do would be to check AST types > > rather than SVal types. Eg., > > ``` > > if (Arg->getType()->isReferenceType()) > > value = State->getRawSVal(*loc); > > ``` > > > > (you might need to do it in the caller function, which still has access to > > the expressions) > > > > It is better this way because expectations are explicitly stated, and the > > assertion would still catch the situation when expectations are not met. > > > > Also, please still add a test case to cover this branch :) > I tried it and failed in std::vector::back(). It seems that the problem is > not the reference, but loc::ConcreteInt. I added a test case, but in our > mocked vector the integer 1 in *(end()-1) is nonloc::ConcreteInt, but in the > real one it is loc::ConcreteInt. I do not see why is there a difference, > neither do I know how could something be a location and a concrete integer at > once. What is loc::ConcreteInt and what to do with it? > What is loc::ConcreteInt and what to do with it? It is a concrete memory address. The null pointer, for example, or maybe a fixed magic pointer in some embedded driver code. Could you post an AST dump for the real `(end()-1)`on which you are failing? It might be that we end up looking at the other `operator-()` as in `(end() - begin())`, while iterators are implemented as pointers; no idea how that could be, but i'm suspecting something like that. https://reviews.llvm.org/D28771 _______________________________________________ cfe-commits mailing list cfe-commits@lists.llvm.org http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/cfe-commits