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…terminator, remove file pointer cases 1. Add headers, Adding missing headers: For obvious reasons. 2. Remove cases without null terminator: Both clang and g++ do not permit strings to be allocated that are declared to be shorter than the actual initializing expression. Since this is a C++ rule, we rule them out. 3. File pointer manipulation functions (e.g. fgets): Not required by the rule.
…/MISRA-C++-2023-Memory-Experimental
…w-nodes-MISRA-C++-2023-Memory-Experimental' into jeongsoolee09/MISRA-C++-2023-Memory-Experimental
These contain false positives due to the limitation of the status quo of the query.
MichaelRFairhurst
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So close to ready!
| CallocFunctionCall() { this.isCallocCall() } | ||
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| override int getMinNumBytes() { | ||
| result = lowerBound(this.getArgument(0)) * lowerBound(this.getArgument(1)) |
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Perhaps we should file a bug to come back to this.
In theory, it would be great to have two versions of the query: one where we know with certainty that the resulting pointer is out of bounds if flow analysis is correct -- we assume the maximum allocation size and the smallest pointer offsets. Then another where we suspect a possible invalid pointer, where we assume the minimum allocation size and the largest pointer offsets. These could share most behavior and would have different precisions.
In the meantime, lets ship!
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| newtype TArrayAllocation = | ||
| TStackAllocation(ArrayDeclaration arrayDecl) or | ||
| TDynamicAllocation(NarrowedHeapAllocationFunctionCall narrowedAlloc) |
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Let's file a bug to come back to the third kind of "allocation," which is just taking the address of a non-array variable or lvalue.
int x = 0;
int *p = &x; // p is essentially a buffer of size 1
Partly I say let's come back because we would need to be careful to distinguish:
int x = 0;
int arr[5] = {0};
int *p1 = &x; // generally, taking an address to anything should be a buffer of size 1
int *p2 = &arr[0]; // except this
// Note that any lvalue expression can create a "buffer" of size 1, not just variables:
int &f() { return x; }
int *p3 = &f(); // also a "buffer" of size 1
int *p4 = &*p3; // also a "buffer" of size 1
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| int getOffset() { | ||
| if this.asPointerArithmetic() instanceof PointerSubExpr | ||
| then result = -this.getOffsetExpr().getValue().toInt() |
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Another thing to file is that this currently only works on constant values, but in the future we could extend this to use range analysis.
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Good point. Introducing range analysis should be careful, otherwise it might generate a lot of noise. This is out of scope of this PR and should be reserved for later.
| sink.getNode() = end.getBasePointerNode() | ||
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| srcOffset = start.getOffset() and | ||
| sinkOffset = end.getOffset() and |
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This overwrites the previous offset, but they should add up.
For example:
int arr[5];
int *p = arr;
int p1 = p + 3; // offset: 3, length: 5
int p2 = p1 + 2; // offset: 5, length: 5Currently, this will produce sinkOffset = 2 for the last line
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Two things to note about the multidimensional arrays:
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Description
Implement Memory1 (
RULE-8-7-1).Change request type
.ql,.qll,.qlsor unit tests)Rules with added or modified queries
RULE-8-7-1Release change checklist
A change note (development_handbook.md#change-notes) is required for any pull request which modifies:
If you are only adding new rule queries, a change note is not required.
Author: Is a change note required?
🚨🚨🚨
Reviewer: Confirm that format of shared queries (not the .qll file, the
.ql file that imports it) is valid by running them within VS Code.
Reviewer: Confirm that either a change note is not required or the change note is required and has been added.
Query development review checklist
For PRs that add new queries or modify existing queries, the following checklist should be completed by both the author and reviewer:
Author
As a rule of thumb, predicates specific to the query should take no more than 1 minute, and for simple queries be under 10 seconds. If this is not the case, this should be highlighted and agreed in the code review process.
Reviewer
As a rule of thumb, predicates specific to the query should take no more than 1 minute, and for simple queries be under 10 seconds. If this is not the case, this should be highlighted and agreed in the code review process.