Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

A2-10-1: add functions and types to identifier consideration #546

Merged
merged 25 commits into from May 8, 2024

Conversation

knewbury01
Copy link
Contributor

@knewbury01 knewbury01 commented Feb 27, 2024

Description

fixes #118

the query seems to maybe be slower than before, will need this confirmed

Change request type

  • Release or process automation (GitHub workflows, internal scripts)
  • Internal documentation
  • External documentation
  • Query files (.ql, .qll, .qls or unit tests)
  • External scripts (analysis report or other code shipped as part of a release)

Rules with added or modified queries

  • No rules added
  • Queries have been added for the following rules:
    • rule number here
  • Queries have been modified for the following rules:
    • A2-10-1
    • RULE-5-3

Release change checklist

A change note (development_handbook.md#change-notes) is required for any pull request which modifies:

  • The structure or layout of the release artifacts.
  • The evaluation performance (memory, execution time) of an existing query.
  • The results of an existing query in any circumstance.

If you are only adding new rule queries, a change note is not required.

Author: Is a change note required?

  • Yes
  • No

🚨🚨🚨
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.

  • Confirmed

Reviewer: Confirm that either a change note is not required or the change note is required and has been added.

  • Confirmed

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

  • Have all the relevant rule package description files been checked in?
  • Have you verified that the metadata properties of each new query is set appropriately?
  • Do all the unit tests contain both "COMPLIANT" and "NON_COMPLIANT" cases?
  • Are the alert messages properly formatted and consistent with the style guide?
  • Have you run the queries on OpenPilot and verified that the performance and results are acceptable?
    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.
  • Does the query have an appropriate level of in-query comments/documentation?
  • Have you considered/identified possible edge cases?
  • Does the query not reinvent features in the standard library?
  • Can the query be simplified further (not golfed!)

Reviewer

  • Have all the relevant rule package description files been checked in?
  • Have you verified that the metadata properties of each new query is set appropriately?
  • Do all the unit tests contain both "COMPLIANT" and "NON_COMPLIANT" cases?
  • Are the alert messages properly formatted and consistent with the style guide?
  • Have you run the queries on OpenPilot and verified that the performance and results are acceptable?
    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.
  • Does the query have an appropriate level of in-query comments/documentation?
  • Have you considered/identified possible edge cases?
  • Does the query not reinvent features in the standard library?
  • Can the query be simplified further (not golfed!)

Copy link
Collaborator

@rvermeulen rvermeulen left a comment

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

The generalization of identifiers needs some further consideration, because of the increased complexity and incomplete exclusions part of the first iteration.

Possible FN are class members where a derived class member hides a base class member. It is possibly because the outer/inner scope definition for this rule doesn't mention it, but it successor in Misra C++ 23 does include that explicitly in the definition of the outer/inner scope.

Our hides logic now has to consider functions and their overloads. The query itself uses the strict version that requires a different scope which excludes this as problem. Not sure if we want to correct the non-strict version.

Given that the Misra C/C++ 23 version of this rule, rule 6.4.1 and 6.4.2, focuses solely on variables and functions, I wonder if we want to do the same here and exclude types.

cpp/common/src/codingstandards/cpp/Scope.qll Show resolved Hide resolved
cpp/common/src/codingstandards/cpp/Scope.qll Show resolved Hide resolved
@knewbury01
Copy link
Contributor Author

The generalization of identifiers needs some further consideration, because of the increased complexity and incomplete exclusions part of the first iteration.

Possible FN are class members where a derived class member hides a base class member. It is possibly because the outer/inner scope definition for this rule doesn't mention it, but it successor in Misra C++ 23 does include that explicitly in the definition of the outer/inner scope.

this is covered in A10-2-1 - so we should be ok to not worry about this exact case?

Our hides logic now has to consider functions and their overloads. The query itself uses the strict version that requires a different scope which excludes this as problem. Not sure if we want to correct the non-strict version.

currently the only use of hides is here, where that wasnt relevant, but I omitted the overloads nonetheless, assuming that overloads are always intentional (not hiding), which I think sounds reasonable?

Given that the Misra C/C++ 23 version of this rule, rule 6.4.1 and 6.4.2, focuses solely on variables and functions, I wonder if we want to do the same here and exclude types.

done, great catch (didnt own the 23 version til this comment)

knewbury01 and others added 2 commits April 2, 2024 14:13
Co-authored-by: Remco Vermeulen <rvermeulen@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Remco Vermeulen <rvermeulen@users.noreply.github.com>
Copy link
Collaborator

@rvermeulen rvermeulen left a comment

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

I left a few considerations for the lambda case and proposal for more reorder the parameters for consistency.

@rvermeulen
Copy link
Collaborator

rvermeulen commented Apr 23, 2024

With the addition of other declarations the performance of this query has significantly decreased. My current hypothesis is that the number of declarations in the global namespace explodes the size of the getOuterScopesOfDeclaration_candidate relation.

Copy link
Collaborator

@rvermeulen rvermeulen left a comment

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

LGTM.

@knewbury01 knewbury01 added this pull request to the merge queue May 8, 2024
Merged via the queue into github:main with commit 380417f May 8, 2024
21 checks passed
@knewbury01 knewbury01 deleted the knewbury01/fix-118 branch May 8, 2024 00:37
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

A2-10-1: Report type and function identifier hiding
2 participants