floating-point literals that are represented exactly by the APFloat in FloatingLiteral. For such literals, we do not emit a warning since such checks are often performed in real code to see if a variable has changed from its original value. This heuristic clearly can lead to false negatives, but the hope is it will significantly reduce false positives to help make the compiler flag more useful. llvm-svn: 44424
752 lines
26 KiB
C++
752 lines
26 KiB
C++
//===--- SemaChecking.cpp - Extra Semantic Checking -----------------------===//
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//
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// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
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//
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// This file was developed by Ted Kremenek and is distributed under
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// the University of Illinois Open Source License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
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//
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//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
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//
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// This file implements extra semantic analysis beyond what is enforced
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// by the C type system.
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//
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//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
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#include "Sema.h"
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#include "clang/AST/ASTContext.h"
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#include "clang/AST/Decl.h"
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#include "clang/AST/Expr.h"
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#include "clang/AST/ExprCXX.h"
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#include "clang/Lex/Preprocessor.h"
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#include "clang/Lex/LiteralSupport.h"
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#include "clang/Basic/SourceManager.h"
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#include "clang/Basic/Diagnostic.h"
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#include "clang/Basic/LangOptions.h"
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#include "clang/Basic/TargetInfo.h"
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#include "llvm/ADT/SmallString.h"
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#include "llvm/ADT/StringExtras.h"
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#include "SemaUtil.h"
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using namespace clang;
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/// CheckFunctionCall - Check a direct function call for various correctness
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/// and safety properties not strictly enforced by the C type system.
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bool
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Sema::CheckFunctionCall(Expr *Fn,
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SourceLocation LParenLoc, SourceLocation RParenLoc,
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FunctionDecl *FDecl,
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Expr** Args, unsigned NumArgsInCall) {
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// Get the IdentifierInfo* for the called function.
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IdentifierInfo *FnInfo = FDecl->getIdentifier();
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if (FnInfo->getBuiltinID() ==
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Builtin::BI__builtin___CFStringMakeConstantString) {
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assert(NumArgsInCall == 1 &&
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"Wrong number of arguments to builtin CFStringMakeConstantString");
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return CheckBuiltinCFStringArgument(Args[0]);
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} else if (FnInfo->getBuiltinID() == Builtin::BI__builtin_va_start) {
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if (NumArgsInCall > 2) {
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Diag(Args[2]->getLocStart(),
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diag::err_typecheck_call_too_many_args, Fn->getSourceRange(),
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SourceRange(Args[2]->getLocStart(),
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Args[NumArgsInCall - 1]->getLocEnd()));
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return true;
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}
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FunctionTypeProto* proto =
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cast<FunctionTypeProto>(CurFunctionDecl->getType());
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if (!proto->isVariadic()) {
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Diag(Fn->getLocStart(),
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diag::err_va_start_used_in_non_variadic_function);
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return true;
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}
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bool SecondArgIsLastNamedArgument = false;
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if (DeclRefExpr *DR = dyn_cast<DeclRefExpr>(Args[1])) {
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if (ParmVarDecl *PV = dyn_cast<ParmVarDecl>(DR->getDecl())) {
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ParmVarDecl *LastNamedArg =
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CurFunctionDecl->getParamDecl(CurFunctionDecl->getNumParams() - 1);
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if (PV == LastNamedArg)
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SecondArgIsLastNamedArgument = true;
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}
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}
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if (!SecondArgIsLastNamedArgument)
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Diag(Args[1]->getLocStart(),
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diag::warn_second_parameter_of_va_start_not_last_named_argument);
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}
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// Search the KnownFunctionIDs for the identifier.
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unsigned i = 0, e = id_num_known_functions;
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for (; i != e; ++i) { if (KnownFunctionIDs[i] == FnInfo) break; }
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if (i == e) return false;
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// Printf checking.
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if (i <= id_vprintf) {
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// Retrieve the index of the format string parameter and determine
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// if the function is passed a va_arg argument.
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unsigned format_idx = 0;
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bool HasVAListArg = false;
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switch (i) {
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default: assert(false && "No format string argument index.");
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case id_printf: format_idx = 0; break;
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case id_fprintf: format_idx = 1; break;
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case id_sprintf: format_idx = 1; break;
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case id_snprintf: format_idx = 2; break;
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case id_asprintf: format_idx = 1; HasVAListArg = true; break;
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case id_vsnprintf: format_idx = 2; HasVAListArg = true; break;
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case id_vasprintf: format_idx = 1; HasVAListArg = true; break;
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case id_vfprintf: format_idx = 1; HasVAListArg = true; break;
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case id_vsprintf: format_idx = 1; HasVAListArg = true; break;
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case id_vprintf: format_idx = 0; HasVAListArg = true; break;
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}
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CheckPrintfArguments(Fn, LParenLoc, RParenLoc, HasVAListArg,
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FDecl, format_idx, Args, NumArgsInCall);
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}
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return false;
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}
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/// CheckBuiltinCFStringArgument - Checks that the argument to the builtin
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/// CFString constructor is correct
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bool Sema::CheckBuiltinCFStringArgument(Expr* Arg) {
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// FIXME: This should go in a helper.
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while (1) {
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if (ParenExpr *PE = dyn_cast<ParenExpr>(Arg))
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Arg = PE->getSubExpr();
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else if (ImplicitCastExpr *ICE = dyn_cast<ImplicitCastExpr>(Arg))
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Arg = ICE->getSubExpr();
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else
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break;
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}
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StringLiteral *Literal = dyn_cast<StringLiteral>(Arg);
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if (!Literal || Literal->isWide()) {
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Diag(Arg->getLocStart(),
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diag::err_cfstring_literal_not_string_constant,
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Arg->getSourceRange());
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return true;
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}
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const char *Data = Literal->getStrData();
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unsigned Length = Literal->getByteLength();
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for (unsigned i = 0; i < Length; ++i) {
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if (!isascii(Data[i])) {
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Diag(PP.AdvanceToTokenCharacter(Arg->getLocStart(), i + 1),
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diag::warn_cfstring_literal_contains_non_ascii_character,
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Arg->getSourceRange());
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break;
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}
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if (!Data[i]) {
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Diag(PP.AdvanceToTokenCharacter(Arg->getLocStart(), i + 1),
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diag::warn_cfstring_literal_contains_nul_character,
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Arg->getSourceRange());
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break;
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}
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}
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return false;
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}
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/// CheckPrintfArguments - Check calls to printf (and similar functions) for
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/// correct use of format strings.
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///
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/// HasVAListArg - A predicate indicating whether the printf-like
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/// function is passed an explicit va_arg argument (e.g., vprintf)
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///
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/// format_idx - The index into Args for the format string.
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///
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/// Improper format strings to functions in the printf family can be
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/// the source of bizarre bugs and very serious security holes. A
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/// good source of information is available in the following paper
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/// (which includes additional references):
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///
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/// FormatGuard: Automatic Protection From printf Format String
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/// Vulnerabilities, Proceedings of the 10th USENIX Security Symposium, 2001.
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///
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/// Functionality implemented:
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///
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/// We can statically check the following properties for string
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/// literal format strings for non v.*printf functions (where the
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/// arguments are passed directly):
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//
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/// (1) Are the number of format conversions equal to the number of
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/// data arguments?
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///
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/// (2) Does each format conversion correctly match the type of the
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/// corresponding data argument? (TODO)
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///
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/// Moreover, for all printf functions we can:
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///
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/// (3) Check for a missing format string (when not caught by type checking).
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///
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/// (4) Check for no-operation flags; e.g. using "#" with format
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/// conversion 'c' (TODO)
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///
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/// (5) Check the use of '%n', a major source of security holes.
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///
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/// (6) Check for malformed format conversions that don't specify anything.
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///
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/// (7) Check for empty format strings. e.g: printf("");
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///
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/// (8) Check that the format string is a wide literal.
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///
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/// All of these checks can be done by parsing the format string.
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///
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/// For now, we ONLY do (1), (3), (5), (6), (7), and (8).
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void
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Sema::CheckPrintfArguments(Expr *Fn,
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SourceLocation LParenLoc, SourceLocation RParenLoc,
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bool HasVAListArg, FunctionDecl *FDecl,
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unsigned format_idx, Expr** Args,
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unsigned NumArgsInCall) {
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// CHECK: printf-like function is called with no format string.
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if (format_idx >= NumArgsInCall) {
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Diag(RParenLoc, diag::warn_printf_missing_format_string,
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Fn->getSourceRange());
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return;
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}
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Expr *OrigFormatExpr = Args[format_idx];
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// FIXME: This should go in a helper.
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while (1) {
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if (ParenExpr *PE = dyn_cast<ParenExpr>(OrigFormatExpr))
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OrigFormatExpr = PE->getSubExpr();
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else if (ImplicitCastExpr *ICE = dyn_cast<ImplicitCastExpr>(OrigFormatExpr))
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OrigFormatExpr = ICE->getSubExpr();
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else
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break;
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}
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// CHECK: format string is not a string literal.
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//
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// Dynamically generated format strings are difficult to
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// automatically vet at compile time. Requiring that format strings
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// are string literals: (1) permits the checking of format strings by
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// the compiler and thereby (2) can practically remove the source of
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// many format string exploits.
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StringLiteral *FExpr = dyn_cast<StringLiteral>(OrigFormatExpr);
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if (FExpr == NULL) {
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Diag(Args[format_idx]->getLocStart(),
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diag::warn_printf_not_string_constant, Fn->getSourceRange());
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return;
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}
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// CHECK: is the format string a wide literal?
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if (FExpr->isWide()) {
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Diag(Args[format_idx]->getLocStart(),
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diag::warn_printf_format_string_is_wide_literal,
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Fn->getSourceRange());
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return;
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}
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// Str - The format string. NOTE: this is NOT null-terminated!
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const char * const Str = FExpr->getStrData();
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// CHECK: empty format string?
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const unsigned StrLen = FExpr->getByteLength();
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if (StrLen == 0) {
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Diag(Args[format_idx]->getLocStart(),
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diag::warn_printf_empty_format_string, Fn->getSourceRange());
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return;
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}
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// We process the format string using a binary state machine. The
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// current state is stored in CurrentState.
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enum {
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state_OrdChr,
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state_Conversion
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} CurrentState = state_OrdChr;
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// numConversions - The number of conversions seen so far. This is
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// incremented as we traverse the format string.
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unsigned numConversions = 0;
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// numDataArgs - The number of data arguments after the format
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// string. This can only be determined for non vprintf-like
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// functions. For those functions, this value is 1 (the sole
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// va_arg argument).
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unsigned numDataArgs = NumArgsInCall-(format_idx+1);
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// Inspect the format string.
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unsigned StrIdx = 0;
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// LastConversionIdx - Index within the format string where we last saw
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// a '%' character that starts a new format conversion.
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unsigned LastConversionIdx = 0;
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for ( ; StrIdx < StrLen ; ++StrIdx ) {
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// Is the number of detected conversion conversions greater than
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// the number of matching data arguments? If so, stop.
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if (!HasVAListArg && numConversions > numDataArgs) break;
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// Handle "\0"
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if(Str[StrIdx] == '\0' ) {
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// The string returned by getStrData() is not null-terminated,
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// so the presence of a null character is likely an error.
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SourceLocation Loc =
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PP.AdvanceToTokenCharacter(Args[format_idx]->getLocStart(),StrIdx+1);
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Diag(Loc, diag::warn_printf_format_string_contains_null_char,
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Fn->getSourceRange());
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return;
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}
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// Ordinary characters (not processing a format conversion).
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if (CurrentState == state_OrdChr) {
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if (Str[StrIdx] == '%') {
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CurrentState = state_Conversion;
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LastConversionIdx = StrIdx;
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}
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continue;
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}
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// Seen '%'. Now processing a format conversion.
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switch (Str[StrIdx]) {
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// Handle dynamic precision or width specifier.
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case '*': {
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++numConversions;
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if (!HasVAListArg && numConversions > numDataArgs) {
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SourceLocation Loc =
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PP.AdvanceToTokenCharacter(Args[format_idx]->getLocStart(),
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StrIdx+1);
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if (Str[StrIdx-1] == '.')
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Diag(Loc, diag::warn_printf_asterisk_precision_missing_arg,
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Fn->getSourceRange());
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else
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Diag(Loc, diag::warn_printf_asterisk_width_missing_arg,
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Fn->getSourceRange());
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// Don't do any more checking. We'll just emit spurious errors.
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return;
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}
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// Perform type checking on width/precision specifier.
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Expr* E = Args[format_idx+numConversions];
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QualType T = E->getType().getCanonicalType();
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if (BuiltinType *BT = dyn_cast<BuiltinType>(T))
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if (BT->getKind() == BuiltinType::Int)
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break;
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SourceLocation Loc =
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PP.AdvanceToTokenCharacter(Args[format_idx]->getLocStart(),
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StrIdx+1);
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if (Str[StrIdx-1] == '.')
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Diag(Loc, diag::warn_printf_asterisk_precision_wrong_type,
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T.getAsString(), E->getSourceRange());
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else
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Diag(Loc, diag::warn_printf_asterisk_width_wrong_type,
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T.getAsString(), E->getSourceRange());
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break;
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}
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// Characters which can terminate a format conversion
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// (e.g. "%d"). Characters that specify length modifiers or
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// other flags are handled by the default case below.
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//
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// FIXME: additional checks will go into the following cases.
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case 'i':
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case 'd':
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case 'o':
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case 'u':
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case 'x':
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case 'X':
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case 'D':
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case 'O':
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case 'U':
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case 'e':
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case 'E':
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case 'f':
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case 'F':
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case 'g':
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case 'G':
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case 'a':
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case 'A':
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case 'c':
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case 'C':
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case 'S':
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case 's':
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case 'p':
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++numConversions;
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CurrentState = state_OrdChr;
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break;
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// CHECK: Are we using "%n"? Issue a warning.
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case 'n': {
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++numConversions;
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CurrentState = state_OrdChr;
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SourceLocation Loc =
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PP.AdvanceToTokenCharacter(Args[format_idx]->getLocStart(),
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LastConversionIdx+1);
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Diag(Loc, diag::warn_printf_write_back, Fn->getSourceRange());
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break;
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}
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// Handle "%%"
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case '%':
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// Sanity check: Was the first "%" character the previous one?
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// If not, we will assume that we have a malformed format
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// conversion, and that the current "%" character is the start
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// of a new conversion.
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if (StrIdx - LastConversionIdx == 1)
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CurrentState = state_OrdChr;
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else {
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// Issue a warning: invalid format conversion.
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SourceLocation Loc =
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PP.AdvanceToTokenCharacter(Args[format_idx]->getLocStart(),
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LastConversionIdx+1);
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Diag(Loc, diag::warn_printf_invalid_conversion,
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std::string(Str+LastConversionIdx, Str+StrIdx),
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Fn->getSourceRange());
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// This conversion is broken. Advance to the next format
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// conversion.
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LastConversionIdx = StrIdx;
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++numConversions;
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}
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break;
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default:
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// This case catches all other characters: flags, widths, etc.
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// We should eventually process those as well.
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break;
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}
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}
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if (CurrentState == state_Conversion) {
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// Issue a warning: invalid format conversion.
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SourceLocation Loc =
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PP.AdvanceToTokenCharacter(Args[format_idx]->getLocStart(),
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LastConversionIdx+1);
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Diag(Loc, diag::warn_printf_invalid_conversion,
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std::string(Str+LastConversionIdx,
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Str+std::min(LastConversionIdx+2, StrLen)),
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Fn->getSourceRange());
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return;
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}
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if (!HasVAListArg) {
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// CHECK: Does the number of format conversions exceed the number
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// of data arguments?
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if (numConversions > numDataArgs) {
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SourceLocation Loc =
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PP.AdvanceToTokenCharacter(Args[format_idx]->getLocStart(),
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LastConversionIdx);
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Diag(Loc, diag::warn_printf_insufficient_data_args,
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Fn->getSourceRange());
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}
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// CHECK: Does the number of data arguments exceed the number of
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// format conversions in the format string?
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else if (numConversions < numDataArgs)
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Diag(Args[format_idx+numConversions+1]->getLocStart(),
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diag::warn_printf_too_many_data_args, Fn->getSourceRange());
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}
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}
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//===--- CHECK: Return Address of Stack Variable --------------------------===//
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static DeclRefExpr* EvalVal(Expr *E);
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static DeclRefExpr* EvalAddr(Expr* E);
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/// CheckReturnStackAddr - Check if a return statement returns the address
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/// of a stack variable.
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void
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Sema::CheckReturnStackAddr(Expr *RetValExp, QualType lhsType,
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SourceLocation ReturnLoc) {
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// Perform checking for returned stack addresses.
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if (lhsType->isPointerType()) {
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if (DeclRefExpr *DR = EvalAddr(RetValExp))
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Diag(DR->getLocStart(), diag::warn_ret_stack_addr,
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DR->getDecl()->getIdentifier()->getName(),
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RetValExp->getSourceRange());
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}
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// Perform checking for stack values returned by reference.
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else if (lhsType->isReferenceType()) {
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// Check for an implicit cast to a reference.
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if (ImplicitCastExpr *I = dyn_cast<ImplicitCastExpr>(RetValExp))
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if (DeclRefExpr *DR = EvalVal(I->getSubExpr()))
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Diag(DR->getLocStart(), diag::warn_ret_stack_ref,
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DR->getDecl()->getIdentifier()->getName(),
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RetValExp->getSourceRange());
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}
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}
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/// EvalAddr - EvalAddr and EvalVal are mutually recursive functions that
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/// check if the expression in a return statement evaluates to an address
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/// to a location on the stack. The recursion is used to traverse the
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/// AST of the return expression, with recursion backtracking when we
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/// encounter a subexpression that (1) clearly does not lead to the address
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/// of a stack variable or (2) is something we cannot determine leads to
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/// the address of a stack variable based on such local checking.
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///
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/// EvalAddr processes expressions that are pointers that are used as
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/// references (and not L-values). EvalVal handles all other values.
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/// At the base case of the recursion is a check for a DeclRefExpr* in
|
|
/// the refers to a stack variable.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This implementation handles:
|
|
///
|
|
/// * pointer-to-pointer casts
|
|
/// * implicit conversions from array references to pointers
|
|
/// * taking the address of fields
|
|
/// * arbitrary interplay between "&" and "*" operators
|
|
/// * pointer arithmetic from an address of a stack variable
|
|
/// * taking the address of an array element where the array is on the stack
|
|
static DeclRefExpr* EvalAddr(Expr *E) {
|
|
|
|
// We should only be called for evaluating pointer expressions.
|
|
assert (E->getType()->isPointerType() && "EvalAddr only works on pointers");
|
|
|
|
// Our "symbolic interpreter" is just a dispatch off the currently
|
|
// viewed AST node. We then recursively traverse the AST by calling
|
|
// EvalAddr and EvalVal appropriately.
|
|
switch (E->getStmtClass()) {
|
|
|
|
case Stmt::ParenExprClass:
|
|
// Ignore parentheses.
|
|
return EvalAddr(cast<ParenExpr>(E)->getSubExpr());
|
|
|
|
case Stmt::UnaryOperatorClass: {
|
|
// The only unary operator that make sense to handle here
|
|
// is AddrOf. All others don't make sense as pointers.
|
|
UnaryOperator *U = cast<UnaryOperator>(E);
|
|
|
|
if (U->getOpcode() == UnaryOperator::AddrOf)
|
|
return EvalVal(U->getSubExpr());
|
|
else
|
|
return NULL;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
case Stmt::BinaryOperatorClass: {
|
|
// Handle pointer arithmetic. All other binary operators are not valid
|
|
// in this context.
|
|
BinaryOperator *B = cast<BinaryOperator>(E);
|
|
BinaryOperator::Opcode op = B->getOpcode();
|
|
|
|
if (op != BinaryOperator::Add && op != BinaryOperator::Sub)
|
|
return NULL;
|
|
|
|
Expr *Base = B->getLHS();
|
|
|
|
// Determine which argument is the real pointer base. It could be
|
|
// the RHS argument instead of the LHS.
|
|
if (!Base->getType()->isPointerType()) Base = B->getRHS();
|
|
|
|
assert (Base->getType()->isPointerType());
|
|
return EvalAddr(Base);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// For conditional operators we need to see if either the LHS or RHS are
|
|
// valid DeclRefExpr*s. If one of them is valid, we return it.
|
|
case Stmt::ConditionalOperatorClass: {
|
|
ConditionalOperator *C = cast<ConditionalOperator>(E);
|
|
|
|
if (DeclRefExpr* LHS = EvalAddr(C->getLHS()))
|
|
return LHS;
|
|
else
|
|
return EvalAddr(C->getRHS());
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// For implicit casts, we need to handle conversions from arrays to
|
|
// pointer values, and implicit pointer-to-pointer conversions.
|
|
case Stmt::ImplicitCastExprClass: {
|
|
ImplicitCastExpr *IE = cast<ImplicitCastExpr>(E);
|
|
Expr* SubExpr = IE->getSubExpr();
|
|
|
|
if (SubExpr->getType()->isPointerType())
|
|
return EvalAddr(SubExpr);
|
|
else
|
|
return EvalVal(SubExpr);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// For casts, we handle pointer-to-pointer conversions (which
|
|
// is essentially a no-op from our mini-interpreter's standpoint).
|
|
// For other casts we abort.
|
|
case Stmt::CastExprClass: {
|
|
CastExpr *C = cast<CastExpr>(E);
|
|
Expr *SubExpr = C->getSubExpr();
|
|
|
|
if (SubExpr->getType()->isPointerType())
|
|
return EvalAddr(SubExpr);
|
|
else
|
|
return NULL;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// C++ casts. For dynamic casts, static casts, and const casts, we
|
|
// are always converting from a pointer-to-pointer, so we just blow
|
|
// through the cast. In the case the dynamic cast doesn't fail
|
|
// (and return NULL), we take the conservative route and report cases
|
|
// where we return the address of a stack variable. For Reinterpre
|
|
case Stmt::CXXCastExprClass: {
|
|
CXXCastExpr *C = cast<CXXCastExpr>(E);
|
|
|
|
if (C->getOpcode() == CXXCastExpr::ReinterpretCast) {
|
|
Expr *S = C->getSubExpr();
|
|
if (S->getType()->isPointerType())
|
|
return EvalAddr(S);
|
|
else
|
|
return NULL;
|
|
}
|
|
else
|
|
return EvalAddr(C->getSubExpr());
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Everything else: we simply don't reason about them.
|
|
default:
|
|
return NULL;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
/// EvalVal - This function is complements EvalAddr in the mutual recursion.
|
|
/// See the comments for EvalAddr for more details.
|
|
static DeclRefExpr* EvalVal(Expr *E) {
|
|
|
|
// We should only be called for evaluating non-pointer expressions, or
|
|
// expressions with a pointer type that are not used as references but instead
|
|
// are l-values (e.g., DeclRefExpr with a pointer type).
|
|
|
|
// Our "symbolic interpreter" is just a dispatch off the currently
|
|
// viewed AST node. We then recursively traverse the AST by calling
|
|
// EvalAddr and EvalVal appropriately.
|
|
switch (E->getStmtClass()) {
|
|
|
|
case Stmt::DeclRefExprClass: {
|
|
// DeclRefExpr: the base case. When we hit a DeclRefExpr we are looking
|
|
// at code that refers to a variable's name. We check if it has local
|
|
// storage within the function, and if so, return the expression.
|
|
DeclRefExpr *DR = cast<DeclRefExpr>(E);
|
|
|
|
if (VarDecl *V = dyn_cast<VarDecl>(DR->getDecl()))
|
|
if(V->hasLocalStorage()) return DR;
|
|
|
|
return NULL;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
case Stmt::ParenExprClass:
|
|
// Ignore parentheses.
|
|
return EvalVal(cast<ParenExpr>(E)->getSubExpr());
|
|
|
|
case Stmt::UnaryOperatorClass: {
|
|
// The only unary operator that make sense to handle here
|
|
// is Deref. All others don't resolve to a "name." This includes
|
|
// handling all sorts of rvalues passed to a unary operator.
|
|
UnaryOperator *U = cast<UnaryOperator>(E);
|
|
|
|
if (U->getOpcode() == UnaryOperator::Deref)
|
|
return EvalAddr(U->getSubExpr());
|
|
|
|
return NULL;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
case Stmt::ArraySubscriptExprClass: {
|
|
// Array subscripts are potential references to data on the stack. We
|
|
// retrieve the DeclRefExpr* for the array variable if it indeed
|
|
// has local storage.
|
|
return EvalAddr(cast<ArraySubscriptExpr>(E)->getBase());
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
case Stmt::ConditionalOperatorClass: {
|
|
// For conditional operators we need to see if either the LHS or RHS are
|
|
// non-NULL DeclRefExpr's. If one is non-NULL, we return it.
|
|
ConditionalOperator *C = cast<ConditionalOperator>(E);
|
|
|
|
if (DeclRefExpr *LHS = EvalVal(C->getLHS()))
|
|
return LHS;
|
|
else
|
|
return EvalVal(C->getRHS());
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Accesses to members are potential references to data on the stack.
|
|
case Stmt::MemberExprClass: {
|
|
MemberExpr *M = cast<MemberExpr>(E);
|
|
|
|
// Check for indirect access. We only want direct field accesses.
|
|
if (!M->isArrow())
|
|
return EvalVal(M->getBase());
|
|
else
|
|
return NULL;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Everything else: we simply don't reason about them.
|
|
default:
|
|
return NULL;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
//===--- CHECK: Floating-Point comparisons (-Wfloat-equal) ---------------===//
|
|
|
|
/// Check for comparisons of floating point operands using != and ==.
|
|
/// Issue a warning if these are no self-comparisons, as they are not likely
|
|
/// to do what the programmer intended.
|
|
void Sema::CheckFloatComparison(SourceLocation loc, Expr* lex, Expr *rex) {
|
|
bool EmitWarning = true;
|
|
|
|
Expr* LeftExprSansParen = IgnoreParen(lex);
|
|
Expr* RightExprSansParen = IgnoreParen(rex);
|
|
|
|
// Special case: check for x == x (which is OK).
|
|
// Do not emit warnings for such cases.
|
|
if (DeclRefExpr* DRL = dyn_cast<DeclRefExpr>(LeftExprSansParen))
|
|
if (DeclRefExpr* DRR = dyn_cast<DeclRefExpr>(RightExprSansParen))
|
|
if (DRL->getDecl() == DRR->getDecl())
|
|
EmitWarning = false;
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Special case: check for comparisons against literals that can be exactly
|
|
// represented by APFloat. In such cases, do not emit a warning. This
|
|
// is a heuristic: often comparison against such literals are used to
|
|
// detect if a value in a variable has not changed. This clearly can
|
|
// lead to false negatives.
|
|
if (EmitWarning) {
|
|
if (FloatingLiteral* FLL = dyn_cast<FloatingLiteral>(LeftExprSansParen)) {
|
|
if (FLL->isExact())
|
|
EmitWarning = false;
|
|
}
|
|
else
|
|
if (FloatingLiteral* FLR = dyn_cast<FloatingLiteral>(RightExprSansParen)){
|
|
if (FLR->isExact())
|
|
EmitWarning = false;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Check for comparisons with builtin types.
|
|
if (EmitWarning)
|
|
if (CallExpr* CL = dyn_cast<CallExpr>(LeftExprSansParen))
|
|
if (isCallBuiltin(CL))
|
|
EmitWarning = false;
|
|
|
|
if (EmitWarning)
|
|
if (CallExpr* CR = dyn_cast<CallExpr>(RightExprSansParen))
|
|
if (isCallBuiltin(CR))
|
|
EmitWarning = false;
|
|
|
|
// Emit the diagnostic.
|
|
if (EmitWarning)
|
|
Diag(loc, diag::warn_floatingpoint_eq,
|
|
lex->getSourceRange(),rex->getSourceRange());
|
|
}
|