This renames `getDefinitionInstruction` to `getAnyDef`, reflecting that
it includes definitions without exact overlap. It renames
`getUseInstruction` to `getUse` for consistency.
perl -p -i -e 's/\bgetUseInstruction\b/getUse/g; s/\bgetDefinitionInstruction\b/getAnyDef/g' \
cpp/ql/src/semmle/code/cpp/ir/**/*.ql* \
cpp/ql/test/**/*.ql* \
cpp/ql/src/semmle/code/cpp/rangeanalysis/**/*.ql*
The configuration in `DefaultOptions.qll` assumed that a call to any
top-level function named `error` would exit the program. This is not
true.
The assumption was probably about `error(3)`, which is a GNU extension.
It only exits if its first argument it not 0. Furthermore, projects such
as openssh may define their own function named `error` with different
behaviour. Because the GNU `error` function is non-standard, it's
perfectly fine to shadow it with a project-specific definition.
This change removes two FPs from `PointlessComparison.qll` on
https://github.com/openssh/openssh-portable.
These predicates currently take a pair of `IRBlock`s - as it stands, at
most one edge can exist from one `IRBlock` to a given other `IRBlock`.
We may need to revisit that assumption and create an `IREdge` IPA type
at some future date
This is motivated by test performance; IR compilation happens separately
for each test and takes a bit over a minute, so combining these 8 tests
saves about 10 minutes of test running.
The IR for the conversion to bool results in a comparison where the left
hand side is not the result of any expression in the AST, so they can't
be usefully converted back to the AST
For ease of reviewing, I've checked in the .expected files from the
AST-based guards library. The next commit accepts output for these tests
and adds tests that use getAST rather than the translation layer.
Many classes have been declared with `extends @cfgnode` because they
should be implemented internally as a control-flow node but should not
expose the member predicates of `ControlFlowNode` to their users. After
the transition in a1e44041e it became mandatory to convert explicitly
between the `Element`-derived `ControlFlowNode` and the raw dbtype
`@cfgnode`, and that commit inserted numerous such conversions as a
result of having all those classes that did not derive from `Element` in
the standard library.
It was also confusing and error-prone that the libraries implementing
`ControlFlowNode` referred to `ControlFlowNode`. This seemingly cyclic
reference worked out because the libraries did not call the predicates
on `ControlFlowNode` whose implementation they were part of.
Both these problems are now solved by adding a new class
`ControlFlowNodeBase extends Element` that should be used in preference
to `@cfgnode` everywhere. This class is for exactly those use cases
where `@cfgnode` should be seen as an `Element` without having too many
member predicates on it.
The classes that move from extending `@cfgnode` to extending
`ControlFlowNodeBase` are: `BasicBlock`, `AdditionalControlFlowEdge`,
`DefOrUse`, `SsaDefinition`, `SubBasicBlock` and `RangeSsaDefinition`.
These previously had to define their own `toString` rootdef, which
typically had some dummy string as result (like `"BasicBlock"`), but now
their `toString` is part of the `Element` rootdef and should not be
overridden otherwise `Element.toString` will sometimes have multiple
results. Removing these dummy `toString` predicates had some effects on
the tests that are included in this commit.
The `getLocation` family of predicates is affected like `toString`, but
the situation is slightly different. Some of these classes had genuinely
useful alternative definitions of locations. Fortunately, they all used
`hasLocationInfo`, which is preferred over `getLocation` by the QL
engine. Because `Element` does not define `getLocationInfo`, each class
can create its own rootdef of this predicate like before.