Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tamas Vajk
03d1a3e0ad Trim test files + remove duplicate newlines 2021-07-01 16:09:11 +02:00
Tamas Vajk
c29d11087b C#: Start using 'options' files in tests 2021-07-01 16:08:47 +02:00
Tom Hvitved
54677189de C#: Introduce RemoteFlowSink class 2020-03-25 20:05:39 +01:00
Tom Hvitved
7ac25d2439 C#: Add more tests for cs/information-exposure-through-exception 2020-03-25 14:33:49 +01:00
Tom Hvitved
b2f99dbbc7 C#: Teach data flow library about CFG splitting
Data flow nodes for expressions do not take CFG splitting into account. Example:

```
if (b)
    x = tainted;
x = x.ToLower();
if (!b)
    Use(x);
```

Flow is incorrectly reported from `tainted` to `x` in `Use(x)`, because the step
from `tainted` to `x.ToLower()` throws away the information that `b = true`.

The solution is to remember the splitting in data flow expression nodes, that is,
to represent the exact control flow node instead of just the expression. With that
we get flow from `tainted` to `[b = true] x.ToLower()`, but not from `tainted` to
`[b = false] x.ToLower()`.

The data flow API remains unchanged, but in order for analyses to fully benefit from
CFG splitting, sanitizers in particular should be CFG-based instead of expression-based:

```
if (b)
   x = tainted;
   if (IsInvalid(x))
       return;
Use(x);
```

If the call to `IsInvalid()` is a sanitizer, then defining an expression node to be
a sanitizer using `GuardedExpr` will be too conservative (`x` in `Use(x)` is in fact
not guarded). However, `[b = true] x` in `[b = true] Use(x)` is guarded, and to help
defining guard-based sanitizers, the class `GuardedDataFlowNode` has been introduced.
2019-01-16 10:39:27 +01:00
Pavel Avgustinov
b55526aa58 QL code and tests for C#/C++/JavaScript. 2018-08-02 17:53:23 +01:00