README.md revision 1.9 1 1.9 rillig [//]: # ($NetBSD: README.md,v 1.9 2022/07/08 20:27:36 rillig Exp $)
2 1.1 rillig
3 1.1 rillig # Introduction
4 1.1 rillig
5 1.3 rillig Lint1 analyzes a single translation unit of C code.
6 1.3 rillig
7 1.7 rillig * It reads the output of the C preprocessor, retaining the comments.
8 1.3 rillig * The lexer in `scan.l` and `lex.c` splits the input into tokens.
9 1.3 rillig * The parser in `cgram.y` creates types and expressions from the tokens.
10 1.3 rillig * It checks declarations in `decl.c`.
11 1.3 rillig * It checks initializations in `init.c`.
12 1.3 rillig * It checks types and expressions in `tree.c`.
13 1.3 rillig
14 1.3 rillig To see how a specific lint message is triggered, read the corresponding unit
15 1.1 rillig test in `tests/usr.bin/xlint/lint1/msg_???.c`.
16 1.1 rillig
17 1.1 rillig # Features
18 1.1 rillig
19 1.1 rillig ## Type checking
20 1.1 rillig
21 1.1 rillig Lint has stricter type checking than most C compilers.
22 1.7 rillig
23 1.7 rillig In _strict bool mode_, lint treats `bool` as a type that is incompatible with
24 1.7 rillig other scalar types, like in C#, Go, Java.
25 1.7 rillig See the test `d_c99_bool_strict.c` for details.
26 1.7 rillig
27 1.7 rillig Lint warns about type conversions that may result in alignment problems.
28 1.7 rillig See the test `msg_135.c` for examples.
29 1.1 rillig
30 1.1 rillig ## Control flow analysis
31 1.1 rillig
32 1.1 rillig Lint roughly tracks the control flow inside a single function.
33 1.3 rillig It doesn't follow `goto` statements precisely though,
34 1.3 rillig it rather assumes that each label is reachable.
35 1.1 rillig See the test `msg_193.c` for examples.
36 1.1 rillig
37 1.1 rillig ## Error handling
38 1.1 rillig
39 1.1 rillig Lint tries to continue parsing and checking even after seeing errors.
40 1.1 rillig This part of lint is not robust though, so expect some crashes here,
41 1.1 rillig as variables may not be properly initialized or be null pointers.
42 1.3 rillig The cleanup after handling a parse error is often incomplete.
43 1.1 rillig
44 1.7 rillig ## Configurable diagnostic messages
45 1.7 rillig
46 1.8 rillig Whether lint prints a message and whether each message is an error, a warning
47 1.8 rillig or just informational depends on several things:
48 1.7 rillig
49 1.7 rillig * The language level, with its possible values:
50 1.7 rillig * traditional C (`-t`)
51 1.7 rillig * migration from traditional C and C90 (default)
52 1.7 rillig * C90 (`-s`)
53 1.7 rillig * C99 (`-S`)
54 1.7 rillig * C11 (`-Ac11`)
55 1.7 rillig * In GCC mode (`-g`), lint allows several GNU extensions,
56 1.7 rillig reducing the amount of printed messages.
57 1.7 rillig * In strict bool mode (`-T`), lint issues errors when `bool` is mixed with
58 1.7 rillig other scalar types, reusing the existing messages 107 and 211, while also
59 1.7 rillig defining new messages that are specific to strict bool mode.
60 1.7 rillig * The option `-a` performs the check for lossy conversions from large integer
61 1.7 rillig types, the option `-aa` extends this check to small integer types as well,
62 1.7 rillig reusing the same message ID.
63 1.7 rillig * The option `-X` suppresses arbitrary messages by their message ID.
64 1.8 rillig * The option `-q` enables additional queries that are not suitable as regular
65 1.8 rillig warnings but may be interesting to look at on a case-by-case basis.
66 1.7 rillig
67 1.1 rillig # Fundamental types
68 1.1 rillig
69 1.1 rillig Lint mainly analyzes expressions (`tnode_t`), which are formed from operators
70 1.1 rillig (`op_t`) and their operands (`tnode_t`).
71 1.1 rillig Each node has a type (`type_t`) and a few other properties.
72 1.1 rillig
73 1.1 rillig ## type_t
74 1.1 rillig
75 1.3 rillig The elementary types are `int`, `_Bool`, `unsigned long`, `pointer` and so on,
76 1.3 rillig as defined in `tspec_t`.
77 1.3 rillig
78 1.3 rillig Actual types like `int`, `const char *` are created by `gettyp(INT)`,
79 1.3 rillig or by deriving new types from existing types, using `block_derive_pointer`,
80 1.2 rillig `block_derive_array` and `block_derive_function`.
81 1.1 rillig (See [below](#memory-management) for the meaning of the prefix `block_`.)
82 1.1 rillig
83 1.1 rillig After a type has been created, it should not be modified anymore.
84 1.1 rillig Ideally all references to types would be `const`, but that's a lot of work.
85 1.3 rillig Before modifying a type,
86 1.1 rillig it needs to be copied using `block_dup_type` or `expr_dup_type`.
87 1.1 rillig
88 1.1 rillig ## tnode_t
89 1.1 rillig
90 1.5 rillig When lint parses an expression,
91 1.1 rillig it builds a tree of nodes representing the AST.
92 1.5 rillig Each node has an operator that defines which other members may be accessed.
93 1.1 rillig The operators and their properties are defined in `ops.def`.
94 1.1 rillig Some examples for operators:
95 1.1 rillig
96 1.1 rillig | Operator | Meaning |
97 1.1 rillig |----------|---------------------------------------------------------|
98 1.1 rillig | CON | compile-time constant in `tn_val` |
99 1.1 rillig | NAME | references the identifier in `tn_sym` |
100 1.1 rillig | UPLUS | the unary operator `+tn_left` |
101 1.1 rillig | PLUS | the binary operator `tn_left + tn_right` |
102 1.1 rillig | CALL | a function call, typically CALL(LOAD(NAME("function"))) |
103 1.3 rillig | ICALL | an indirect function call |
104 1.1 rillig | CVT | an implicit conversion or an explicit cast |
105 1.1 rillig
106 1.3 rillig See `debug_node` for how to interpret the members of `tnode_t`.
107 1.3 rillig
108 1.1 rillig ## sym_t
109 1.1 rillig
110 1.1 rillig There is a single symbol table (`symtab`) for the whole translation unit.
111 1.1 rillig This means that the same identifier may appear multiple times.
112 1.1 rillig To distinguish the identifiers, each symbol has a block level.
113 1.1 rillig Symbols from inner scopes are added to the beginning of the table,
114 1.1 rillig so they are found first when looking for the identifier.
115 1.1 rillig
116 1.1 rillig # Memory management
117 1.1 rillig
118 1.1 rillig ## Block scope
119 1.1 rillig
120 1.1 rillig The memory that is allocated by the `block_*_alloc` functions is freed at the
121 1.1 rillig end of analyzing the block, that is, after the closing `}`.
122 1.1 rillig See `compound_statement_rbrace:` in `cgram.y`.
123 1.1 rillig
124 1.1 rillig ## Expression scope
125 1.1 rillig
126 1.1 rillig The memory that is allocated by the `expr_*_alloc` functions is freed at the
127 1.1 rillig end of analyzing the expression.
128 1.1 rillig See `expr_free_all`.
129 1.1 rillig
130 1.1 rillig # Null pointers
131 1.1 rillig
132 1.1 rillig * Expressions can be null.
133 1.2 rillig * This typically happens in case of syntax errors or other errors.
134 1.1 rillig * The subtype of a pointer, array or function is never null.
135 1.1 rillig
136 1.1 rillig # Common variable names
137 1.1 rillig
138 1.1 rillig | Name | Type | Meaning |
139 1.1 rillig |------|-----------|------------------------------------------------------|
140 1.1 rillig | t | `tspec_t` | a simple type such as `INT`, `FUNC`, `PTR` |
141 1.1 rillig | tp | `type_t` | a complete type such as `pointer to array[3] of int` |
142 1.1 rillig | stp | `type_t` | the subtype of a pointer, array or function |
143 1.1 rillig | tn | `tnode_t` | a tree node, mostly used for expressions |
144 1.1 rillig | op | `op_t` | an operator used in an expression |
145 1.3 rillig | ln | `tnode_t` | the left-hand operand of a binary operator |
146 1.3 rillig | rn | `tnode_t` | the right-hand operand of a binary operator |
147 1.1 rillig | sym | `sym_t` | a symbol from the symbol table |
148 1.1 rillig
149 1.3 rillig # Abbreviations in variable names
150 1.1 rillig
151 1.3 rillig | Abbr | Expanded |
152 1.3 rillig |------|---------------------------------------------|
153 1.3 rillig | l | left |
154 1.3 rillig | r | right |
155 1.3 rillig | o | old (during type conversions) |
156 1.3 rillig | n | new (during type conversions) |
157 1.3 rillig | op | operator |
158 1.3 rillig | arg | the number of the argument, for diagnostics |
159 1.1 rillig
160 1.2 rillig # Debugging
161 1.2 rillig
162 1.2 rillig Useful breakpoints are:
163 1.2 rillig
164 1.9 rillig | Function/Code | File | Remarks |
165 1.9 rillig |---------------------|---------|------------------------------------------------------|
166 1.9 rillig | build_binary | tree.c | Creates an expression for a unary or binary operator |
167 1.9 rillig | initialization_expr | init.c | Checks a single initializer |
168 1.9 rillig | expr | tree.c | Checks a full expression |
169 1.9 rillig | typeok | tree.c | Checks two types for compatibility |
170 1.9 rillig | vwarning_at | err.c | Prints a warning |
171 1.9 rillig | verror_at | err.c | Prints an error |
172 1.9 rillig | assert_failed | err.c | Prints the location of a failed assertion |
173 1.9 rillig | `switch (yyn)` | cgram.c | Reduction of a grammar rule |
174 1.2 rillig
175 1.1 rillig # Tests
176 1.1 rillig
177 1.1 rillig The tests are in `tests/usr.bin/xlint`.
178 1.2 rillig By default, each test is run with the lint flags `-g` for GNU mode,
179 1.1 rillig `-S` for C99 mode and `-w` to report warnings as errors.
180 1.1 rillig
181 1.1 rillig Each test can override the lint flags using comments of the following forms:
182 1.2 rillig
183 1.1 rillig * `/* lint1-flags: -tw */` replaces the default flags.
184 1.1 rillig * `/* lint1-extra-flags: -p */` adds to the default flags.
185 1.1 rillig
186 1.1 rillig Most tests check the diagnostics that lint generates.
187 1.1 rillig They do this by placing `expect` comments near the location of the diagnostic.
188 1.1 rillig The comment `/* expect+1: ... */` expects a diagnostic to be generated for the
189 1.1 rillig code 1 line below, `/* expect-5: ... */` expects a diagnostic to be generated
190 1.1 rillig for the code 5 lines above.
191 1.1 rillig Each `expect` comment must be in a single line.
192 1.6 rillig At the start and the end of the comment, the placeholder `...` stands for an
193 1.6 rillig arbitrary sequence of characters.
194 1.6 rillig There may be other code or comments in the same line of the `.c` file.
195 1.1 rillig
196 1.1 rillig Each diagnostic has its own test `msg_???.c` that triggers the corresponding
197 1.1 rillig diagnostic.
198 1.1 rillig Most other tests focus on a single feature.
199 1.1 rillig
200 1.1 rillig ## Adding a new test
201 1.1 rillig
202 1.4 rillig 1. Run `make add-test NAME=test_name`.
203 1.7 rillig 2. Run `cd ../../../tests/usr.bin/xlint/lint1`.
204 1.7 rillig 3. Sort the `FILES` lines in `Makefile`.
205 1.7 rillig 4. Make the test generate the desired diagnostics.
206 1.7 rillig 5. Run `./accept.sh test_name` until it no longer complains.
207 1.7 rillig 6. Run `cd ../../..`.
208 1.7 rillig 7. Run `cvs commit distrib/sets/lists/tests/mi tests/usr.bin/xlint`.
209