On Wed, 2023-08-16 at 15:17 -0400, Eric Feng via Gcc wrote: > Hi everyone,
[fixing typo in my email address] Hi Eric, thanks for the update, and the WIP patch. > > After pushing the code that supports various known function classes last week, > I've turned my attention back to the core reference count checking > functionality. This functionality used to reside in region_model, which > wasn't ideal. To address this, I've introduced a hook to register callbacks > to pop_frame. Specifically, this allows the code that checks the reference > count and emits diagnostics to be housed within the plugin, rather than the > core analyzer. > > As of now, the parameters of pop_frame_callback are tailored specifically to > our needs. If the use of callbacks at the end of pop_frame becomes more > prevalent, we can revisit the setup to potentially make it more general. > > Moreover, the core reference count checking logic was previously somewhat > bloated, contained in one extensive function. I've since refactored it, > breaking it down into several helper functions to simplify and reduce > complexity. There are still some aspects that need refinement, especially > since the plugin has seen changes since I last worked on this logic. However, > I believe that there aren't any significant problems. Suggestion: introduce some more decls into analyzer-decls.h and known_functions for them into the plugin so that you can run/test/debug the helper functions independently (similar to the existing ones in kf- analyzer.cc). e.g. extern void __analyzer_cpython_dump_real_refcounts (void); extern void __analyzer_cpython_dump_ob_refcnt (void); > > Currently, I've started working a custom stmt_finder similar to > leak_stmt_finder > to address the issue of m_stmt and m_stmt_finder being NULL at the time of > region_model::pop_frame. This approach was discussed as a viable solution in > a previous email, and I'll keep everyone posted on my progress. Afterwards, I > will go back to address the refinements necessary mentioned above. You might want to experiment with splitting out (a) "is there a refcount problem" from (b) "emit a refcount problem". For example, you could hardcode (a) to true, so we always complain with (b) on every heap-allocated object, just to debug the stmt_finder workaround. [...snip...] BTW, you don't need to bother to write ChangeLog entries if you're just sending a work-in-progress for me. > diff --git a/gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/plugin/analyzer_cpython_plugin.c > b/gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/plugin/analyzer_cpython_plugin.c > index 7cd72e8a886..918bb5a5587 100644 > --- a/gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/plugin/analyzer_cpython_plugin.c > +++ b/gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/plugin/analyzer_cpython_plugin.c [...] > +/* For PyListObjects: processes the ob_item field within the current region > and > + * increments the reference count if conditions are met. */ > +void > +process_ob_item_region (const region_model *model, region_model_manager *mgr, > + region_model_context *ctxt, const region *curr_region, > + const svalue *pylist_type_ptr, const region *base_reg, > + int &actual_refcnt) You seem to be special-casing PyListObject here; why? That seems like it's not going to be scalable tothe general case. Am I right in thinking the intent of this code is to count the actual number of pointers in memory that point to a particular region? Doesn't the ob_item buffer show up in the store as another cluster? Can't you just look at the bindings in the clusters and tally up the pointers for each heap_allocated_region? (accumulating a result map from region to int of the actual reference counts). Or am I missing something? What does model->debug (); show in your examples? > +{ > + tree ob_item_field_tree = get_field_by_name (pylistobj_record, "ob_item"); > + const region *ob_item_field_reg > + = mgr->get_field_region (curr_region, ob_item_field_tree); > + const svalue *ob_item_ptr = model->get_store_value (ob_item_field_reg, > ctxt); > + > + if (const auto &cast_ob_item_reg = ob_item_ptr->dyn_cast_region_svalue ()) > + { > + const region *ob_item_reg = cast_ob_item_reg->get_pointee (); > + const svalue *allocated_bytes = model->get_dynamic_extents > (ob_item_reg); > + const region *ob_item_sized = mgr->get_sized_region ( > + ob_item_reg, pyobj_ptr_ptr, allocated_bytes); > + const svalue *buffer_contents_sval > + = model->get_store_value (ob_item_sized, ctxt); > + > + if (const auto &buffer_contents > + = buffer_contents_sval->dyn_cast_compound_svalue ()) > + { > + for (const auto &buffer_content : buffer_contents->get_map ()) > + { > + const auto &content_value = buffer_content.second; > + if (const auto &content_region > + = content_value->dyn_cast_region_svalue ()) > + if (content_region->get_pointee () == base_reg) > + actual_refcnt++; > + } > + } > + } > +} > + > +/* Counts the actual references from all clusters in the model's store. */ > +int > +count_actual_references (const region_model *model, region_model_manager > *mgr, > + region_model_context *ctxt, const region *base_reg, > + const svalue *pylist_type_ptr, tree ob_type_field) > +{ > + int actual_refcnt = 0; > + for (const auto &other_cluster : *model->get_store ()) > + { > + for (const auto &binding : other_cluster.second->get_map ()) > + { > + const auto &sval = binding.second; > + const auto &curr_region = sval->maybe_get_region (); > + > + if (!curr_region || curr_region->get_kind () != RK_HEAP_ALLOCATED) > + continue; > + > + increment_count_if_base_matches (curr_region, base_reg, > + actual_refcnt); > + > + const region *ob_type_region > + = mgr->get_field_region (curr_region, ob_type_field); > + const svalue *stored_sval > + = model->get_store_value (ob_type_region, ctxt); > + const auto &remove_cast = stored_sval->dyn_cast_unaryop_svalue (); > + > + if (!remove_cast) > + continue; > + > + const svalue *type = remove_cast->get_arg (); > + if (type == pylist_type_ptr) > + process_ob_item_region (model, mgr, ctxt, curr_region, > + pylist_type_ptr, base_reg, actual_refcnt); > + } > + } > + return actual_refcnt; > +} > Hope the above is constructive. Dave