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Version: 1.0.0

List of all issue types

Here is an overview of the issue types currently reported by Infer.

ASSIGN_POINTER_WARNING​

Reported as "Assign Pointer Warning" by linters.

This check fires when a pointer to an Obj-C object is tagged with an assign property (similar to the -Warc-unsafe-retained-assign compiler flag). Not holding a strong reference to the object makes it easy to accidentally create and use a dangling pointer.

AUTORELEASEPOOL_SIZE_COMPLEXITY_INCREASE​

Reported as "Autoreleasepool Size Complexity Increase" by cost.

[EXPERIMENTAL] Infer reports this issue when the ObjC autoreleasepool's size complexity of a program increases in degree: e.g. from constant to linear or from logarithmic to quadratic. This issue type is only reported in differential mode: i.e when we are comparing the analysis results of two runs of infer on a file.

AUTORELEASEPOOL_SIZE_COMPLEXITY_INCREASE_UI_THREAD​

Reported as "Autoreleasepool Size Complexity Increase Ui Thread" by cost.

[EXPERIMENTAL] Infer reports this issue when the ObjC autoreleasepool's complexity of the procedure increases in degree and the procedure runs on the UI (main) thread.

Infer considers a method as running on the UI thread whenever:

  • The method, one of its overrides, its class, or an ancestral class, is annotated with @UiThread.
  • The method, or one of its overrides is annotated with @OnEvent, @OnClick, etc.
  • The method or its callees call a Litho.ThreadUtils method such as assertMainThread.

AUTORELEASEPOOL_SIZE_UNREACHABLE_AT_EXIT​

Reported as "Autoreleasepool Size Unreachable At Exit" by cost.

[EXPERIMENTAL] This issue type indicates that the program's execution doesn't reach the exit node. Hence, we cannot compute a static bound of ObjC autoreleasepool's size for the procedure.

BAD_POINTER_COMPARISON​

Reported as "Bad Pointer Comparison" by linters.

Infer reports these warnings in Objective-C when a boxed primitive type such as NSNumber * is coerced to a boolean in a comparison. For example, consider the code

void foo(NSNumber * n) {
if (n) ...

The branch in the above code will be taken when the pointer n is non-nil, but the programmer might have actually wanted the branch to be taken when the integer pointed to by n is nonzero (e.g., she may have meant to call an accessor like [n intValue] instead). Infer will ask the programmer explicitly compare n to nil or call an accessor to clarify her intention.

BIABDUCTION_MEMORY_LEAK​

Reported as "Memory Leak" by biabduction.

See MEMORY_LEAK.

BUFFER_OVERRUN_L1​

Reported as "Buffer Overrun L1" by bufferoverrun.

Buffer overrun reports fall into several "buckets" corresponding to the expected precision of the report. The higher the number, the more likely it is to be a false positive.

  • L1: The most faithful report, when it must be unsafe. For example, array size: [5,5], offset: [3,3].

  • L2: Less faithful report than L1, when it may be unsafe. For example, array size:[5,5], offset: [0,5]. Note that the offset may be a safe value in the real execution, i.e. 0, 1, 2, 3, 4.

  • L5: The least faithful report, when there is an interval top. For example, array size: [5,5], offset: [-oo,+oo].

  • L4: More faithful report than L5, when there is an infinity value. For example, array size: [5,5], offset: [0, +oo].

  • L3: The reports that are not included in the above cases.

  • S2: An array access is unsafe by symbolic values. For example, array size: [n,n], offset [n,+oo].

  • U5: An array access is unsafe by unknown values, which are usually from unknown function calls.

BUFFER_OVERRUN_L2​

Reported as "Buffer Overrun L2" by bufferoverrun.

See BUFFER_OVERRUN_L1

BUFFER_OVERRUN_L3​

Reported as "Buffer Overrun L3" by bufferoverrun.

See BUFFER_OVERRUN_L1

BUFFER_OVERRUN_L4​

Reported as "Buffer Overrun L4" by bufferoverrun.

See BUFFER_OVERRUN_L1

BUFFER_OVERRUN_L5​

Reported as "Buffer Overrun L5" by bufferoverrun.

See BUFFER_OVERRUN_L1

BUFFER_OVERRUN_S2​

Reported as "Buffer Overrun S2" by bufferoverrun.

See BUFFER_OVERRUN_L1

BUFFER_OVERRUN_U5​

Reported as "Buffer Overrun U5" by bufferoverrun.

See BUFFER_OVERRUN_L1

CAPTURED_STRONG_SELF​

Reported as "Captured strongSelf" by self-in-block.

This will happen in one of two cases generally:

  1. One uses weakSelf but forgot to declare it weak first.
  2. One is using strongSelf, declared in a block, in another (inside) block. This changes the delicate balance of the weakSelf/strongSelf use in the first block. The retain cycle is avoided there because strongSelf is a local variable to the block. If strongSelf is used in the inside block, then it's not a local variable anymore, but a captured variable.

CHECKERS_ALLOCATES_MEMORY​

Reported as "Allocates Memory" by annotation-reachability.

A method annotated with @NoAllocation transitively calls new.

Example:

class C implements I {
@NoAllocation
void directlyAllocatingMethod() {
new Object();
}
}

CHECKERS_ANNOTATION_REACHABILITY_ERROR​

Reported as "Annotation Reachability Error" by annotation-reachability.

A method annotated with an annotation @A transitively calls a method annotated @B where the combination of annotations is forbidden (for example, @UiThread calling @WorkerThread).

CHECKERS_CALLS_EXPENSIVE_METHOD​

Reported as "Expensive Method Called" by annotation-reachability.

A method annotated with @PerformanceCritical transitively calls a method annotated @Expensive.

Example:

class C {
@PerformanceCritical
void perfCritical() {
expensive();
}

@Expensive
void expensive() {}
}

CHECKERS_EXPENSIVE_OVERRIDES_UNANNOTATED​

Reported as "Expensive Overrides Unannotated" by annotation-reachability.

A method annotated with @Expensive overrides an un-annotated method.

Example:

interface I {
void foo();
}

class A implements I {
@Expensive
public void foo() {}
}

CHECKERS_FRAGMENT_RETAINS_VIEW​

Reported as "Fragment Retains View" by fragment-retains-view.

This error type is Android-specific. It fires when a Fragment type fails to nullify one or more of its declared View fields in onDestroyView. In performance-sensitive applications, a Fragment should initialize all View's in onCreateView and nullify them in onDestroyView. If a Fragment is placed on the back stack and fails to nullify a View in onDestroyView, it will retain a useless reference to that View that will not be cleaned up until the Fragment is resumed or destroyed.

Action: Nullify the View in question in onDestroyView.

CHECKERS_IMMUTABLE_CAST​

Reported as "Checkers Immutable Cast" by immutable-cast.

This error type is reported in Java. It fires when an immutable collection is returned from a method whose type is mutable.

  public List<String> getSomeList() {
ImmutableList<String> l = foo(...);
return l;
}

This can lead to a runtime error if users of getSomeList try to modify the list e.g. by adding elements.

Action: you can change the return type to be immutable, or make a copy of the collection so that it can be modified.

CHECKERS_PRINTF_ARGS​

Reported as "Checkers Printf Args" by printf-args.

This error is reported when the argument types to a printf method do not match the format string.

  void stringInsteadOfInteger(PrintStream out) {
out.printf("Hello %d", "world");
}

Action: fix the mismatch between format string and argument types.

COMPONENT_WITH_MULTIPLE_FACTORY_METHODS​

Reported as "Component With Multiple Factory Methods" by linters.

CONDITION_ALWAYS_FALSE​

Reported as "Condition Always False" by bufferoverrun.

A condition expression is always evaluated to false.

CONDITION_ALWAYS_TRUE​

Reported as "Condition Always True" by bufferoverrun.

A condition expression is always evaluated to true.

CONFIG_CHECKS_BETWEEN_MARKERS​

Reported as "Config Checks Between Markers" by config-checks-between-markers.

A config checking is done between a marker's start and end

CONSTANT_ADDRESS_DEREFERENCE​

Reported as "Constant Address Dereference" by pulse.

This is reported when an address obtained via a non-zero constant is dereferenced. If the address is zero then NULLPTR_DEREFERENCE is reported instead.

For example, int *p = (int *) 123; *p = 42; generates this issue type.

CREATE_INTENT_FROM_URI​

Reported as "Create Intent From Uri" by quandary.

Create an intent/start a component using a (possibly user-controlled) URI. may or may not be an issue depending on where the URI comes from.

CROSS_SITE_SCRIPTING​

Reported as "Cross Site Scripting" by quandary.

Untrusted data flows into HTML; XSS risk.

CXX_REFERENCE_CAPTURED_IN_OBJC_BLOCK​

Reported as "Cxx Reference Captured In Objc Block" by linters.

With this check, Infer detects C++ references captured in a block. Doing this is almost always wrong. The reason is that C++ references are not managed pointers (like ARC pointers) and so the referent is likely to be gone by the time the block gets executed. One solution is to do a local copy of the reference and pass that to the block. Example:

(int &) v;
...
const int copied_v = v;
^{
// use copied_v not v
};

DANGLING_POINTER_DEREFERENCE​

Reported as "Dangling Pointer Dereference" by biabduction.

DEADLOCK​

Reported as "Deadlock" by starvation.

This error is currently reported in Java. A deadlock occurs when two distinct threads try to acquire two locks in reverse orders. The following code illustrates a textbook example. Of course, in real deadlocks, the lock acquisitions may be separated by deeply nested call chains.

  public void lockAThenB() {
synchronized(lockA) {
synchronized(lockB) {
// do something with both resources
}
}
}

public void lockBThenA() {
synchronized(lockB) {
synchronized(lockA) {
// do something with both resources
}
}
}

The standard solution to a deadlock is to fix an order of lock acquisition and adhere to that order in all cases. Another solution may be to shrink the critical sections (i.e., the code executing under lock) to the minimum required.

Old-style containers such as Vector are synchronized on the object monitor, which means that deadlocks can occur even without explicit synchronisation on both threads. For instance:

  public void lockAThenAddToVector() {
synchronized(lockA) {
vector.add(object);
}
}

public void lockVectorThenA() {
synchronized(vector) {
synchronized(lockA) {
// do something with both resources
}
}
}

Infer has support for detecting these deadlocks too.

To suppress reports of deadlocks in a method m() use the @SuppressLint("DEADLOCK") annotation, as follows:

  import android.annotation.SuppressLint;

@SuppressLint("DEADLOCK")
public void m() {
...
}

DEAD_STORE​

Reported as "Dead Store" by liveness.

This error is reported in C++. It fires when the value assigned to a variables is never used (e.g., int i = 1; i = 2; return i;).

DIRECT_ATOMIC_PROPERTY_ACCESS​

Reported as "Direct Atomic Property Access" by linters.

This check warns you when you are accessing an atomic property directly with an ivar. This makes the atomic property not atomic anymore. So potentially you may get a race condition.

To fix the problem you need to access properties with their getter or setter.

DISCOURAGED_WEAK_PROPERTY_CUSTOM_SETTER​

Reported as "Discouraged Weak Property Custom Setter" by linters.

This check warns you when you have a custom setter for a weak property. When compiled with Automatic Reference Counting (ARC, -fobj-arc) ARC may set the property to nil without invoking the setter, for example:

#import <Foundation/Foundation.h>

@interface Employee : NSObject {
NSString* _name;
__weak Employee* _manager;
}
-(id)initWithName:(NSString*)name;
@property(atomic, weak) Employee* manager;
-(void)report;
@end

@implementation Employee

-(id)initWithName:(NSString*)name {
_name = name;
return self;
}

-(NSString*)description {
return _name;
}

-(void)report {
NSLog(@"I work for %@", _manager);
}

-(Employee*)manager {
return _manager;
}

// DON'T do this; ARC will not call this when setting _manager to nil.
-(void)setManager:(Employee*)newManager {
NSLog(@"Meet the new boss...");
_manager = newManager;
}

@end

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
Employee* bob = [[Employee alloc] initWithName:@"Bob"];
Employee* sue = [[Employee alloc] initWithName:@"Sue"];
bob.manager = sue;
[bob report];
sue = nil;
[bob report];
return 0;
}

This prints:

Meet the new boss...
I work for Sue
I work for (null)

Note that the custom setter was only invoked once.

DIVIDE_BY_ZERO​

Reported as "Divide By Zero" by biabduction.

EMPTY_VECTOR_ACCESS​

Reported as "Empty Vector Access" by biabduction.

This error type is reported only in C++, in versions >= C++11.

The code is trying to access an element of a vector that Infer believes to be empty. Such an access will cause undefined behavior at runtime.

#include <vector>
int foo(){
const std::vector<int> vec;
return vec[0]; // Empty vector access reported here
}

ERADICATE_BAD_NESTED_CLASS_ANNOTATION​

Reported as "@Nullsafe annotation is inconsistent with outer class" by eradicate.

ERADICATE_CONDITION_REDUNDANT​

Reported as "Condition Redundant" by eradicate.

This report is inactive by default. Condition (x != null) or (x == null) when x cannot be null: the first condition is always true and the second is always false

Example:

class C {
void m() {
String s = new String("abc");
if (s != null) {
int n = s.length();
}
}
}

Action: Make sure that the annotations are correct, as the condition is considered redundant based on the existing annotations. In particular, check the annotation of any input parameters and fields of the current method, as well as the annotations of any method called directly by the current method, if relevant. If the annotations are correct, you can remove the redundant case.

ERADICATE_FIELD_NOT_INITIALIZED​

Reported as "Field Not Initialized" by eradicate.

The constructor does not initialize a field f which is not annotated with @Nullable

Example:

class C {
String f;

C () { // field f not initialized and not annotated @Nullable
}
}

Action: The preferred action is to initialize the field with a value that is not null. If, by design, null is a valid value for the field, then it should be annotated with @Nullable.

ERADICATE_FIELD_NOT_NULLABLE​

Reported as "Field Not Nullable" by eradicate.

An assignment x.f = v where v could be null and field f is not annotated with @Nullable.

Example:

class C {
String f;

void foo(@Nullable String s) {
f = s;
}
}

Action: The preferred action is to ensure that a null value is never stored in the field, by changing the code or changing annotations. If this cannot be done, add a @Nullable annotation to the field. This annotation might trigger more warnings in other code that uses the field, as that code must now deal with null values.

ERADICATE_FIELD_OVER_ANNOTATED​

Reported as "Field Over Annotated" by eradicate.

ERADICATE_INCONSISTENT_SUBCLASS_PARAMETER_ANNOTATION​

Reported as "Inconsistent Subclass Parameter Annotation" by eradicate.

A parameter of the overridden method is missing a @Nullable annotation present in the superclass.

Action: choose a consistent annotation based on the desired invariant.

Example:

class A {

int len(@Nullable String s) {
if (s != null) {
return s.length();
} else {
return 0;
}
}
}

class B extends A {

int len(String s) { // @Nullable missing.
return s.length();
}
}

A consistent use of @Nullable on parameters across subtyping should prevent runtime issue like in:

public class Main {

String s;

int foo() {
A a = new B();
return a.len(s);
}
}

ERADICATE_INCONSISTENT_SUBCLASS_RETURN_ANNOTATION​

Reported as "Inconsistent Subclass Return Annotation" by eradicate.

The return type of the overridden method is annotated @Nullable, but the corresponding method in the superclass is not.

Action: choose a consistent annotation based on the desired invariant.

Example:

class A {
String create() {
return new String("abc");
}
}

class B extends A {
@Nullable String create() { // Inconsistent @Nullable annotation.
return null;
}
}

A consistent use of @Nullable on the return type across subtyping should prevent runtime issue like in:

class Main {

int foo(A a) {
String s = a.create();
return s.length();
}

void main(String[] args) {
A a = new B();
foo(a);
}

}

ERADICATE_META_CLASS_CAN_BE_NULLSAFE​

Reported as "Class has 0 issues and can be marked @Nullsafe" by eradicate.

ERADICATE_META_CLASS_IS_NULLSAFE​

Reported as "Class is marked @Nullsafe and has 0 issues" by eradicate.

ERADICATE_META_CLASS_NEEDS_IMPROVEMENT​

Reported as "Class needs improvement to become @Nullsafe" by eradicate.

Reported when the class either:

  • has at least one nullability issue, or
  • has at least one (currently possibly hidden) issue preventing it from being marked @Nullsafe.

ERADICATE_NULLABLE_DEREFERENCE​

Reported as "Nullable Dereference" by eradicate.

ERADICATE_PARAMETER_NOT_NULLABLE​

Reported as "Parameter Not Nullable" by eradicate.

Method call x.m(..., v, ...) where v can be null and the corresponding parameter in method m is not annotated with @Nullable

Example:

class C {
void m(C x) {
String s = x.toString()
}

void test(@Nullable C x) {
m(x);
}
}

Action: The preferred action is to ensure that a null value is never passed to the method, by changing the code or changing annotations. If this cannot be done, add a @Nullable annotation to the relevant parameter in the method declaration. This annotation might trigger more warnings in the implementation of method m, as that code must now deal with null values.

ERADICATE_REDUNDANT_NESTED_CLASS_ANNOTATION​

Reported as "@Nullsafe annotation is redundant" by eradicate.

ERADICATE_RETURN_NOT_NULLABLE​

Reported as "Return Not Nullable" by eradicate.

Method m can return null, but the method's return type is not annotated with @Nullable

Example:

class C {
String m() {
return null;
}
}

Action: The preferred action is to ensure that a null value is never returned by the method, by changing the code or changing annotations. If this cannot be done, add a @Nullable annotation to the method declaration. This annotation might trigger more warnings in the callers of method m, as the callers must now deal with null values.

ERADICATE_RETURN_OVER_ANNOTATED​

Reported as "Return Over Annotated" by eradicate.

This report is inactive by default. Method m is annotated with @Nullable but the method cannot return null

Example:

class C {
@Nullable String m() {
String s = new String("abc");
return s;
}
}

Action: Make sure that the annotations are correct, as the return annotation is considered redundant based on the existing annotations. In particular, check the annotation of any input parameters and fields of the current method, as well as the annotations of any method called directly by the current method, if relevant. If the annotations are correct, you can remove the @Nullable annotation.

ERADICATE_UNCHECKED_USAGE_IN_NULLSAFE​

Reported as "Nullsafe mode: unchecked usage of a value" by eradicate.

ERADICATE_UNVETTED_THIRD_PARTY_IN_NULLSAFE​

Reported as "Nullsafe mode: unchecked usage of unvetted third-party" by eradicate.

EXECUTION_TIME_COMPLEXITY_INCREASE​

Reported as "Execution Time Complexity Increase" by cost.

Infer reports this issue when the execution time complexity of a program increases in degree: e.g. from constant to linear or from logarithmic to quadratic. This issue type is only reported in differential mode: i.e when we are comparing the analysis results of two runs of infer on a file.

EXECUTION_TIME_COMPLEXITY_INCREASE_UI_THREAD​

Reported as "Execution Time Complexity Increase Ui Thread" by cost.

Infer reports this issue when the execution time complexity of the procedure increases in degree and the procedure runs on the UI (main) thread.

Infer considers a method as running on the UI thread whenever:

  • The method, one of its overrides, its class, or an ancestral class, is annotated with @UiThread.
  • The method, or one of its overrides is annotated with @OnEvent, @OnClick, etc.
  • The method or its callees call a Litho.ThreadUtils method such as assertMainThread.

EXECUTION_TIME_UNREACHABLE_AT_EXIT​

Reported as "Execution Time Unreachable At Exit" by cost.

This issue type indicates that the program's execution doesn't reach the exit node. Hence, we cannot compute a static bound for the procedure.

Examples:

void exit_unreachable() {
exit(0); // modeled as unreachable
}


void infeasible_path_unreachable() {
Preconditions.checkState(false); // like assert false, state pruned to bottom
}

EXPENSIVE_LOOP_INVARIANT_CALL​

Reported as "Expensive Loop Invariant Call" by loop-hoisting.

We report this issue type when a function is loop-invariant and also expensive (i.e. at least has linear complexity as determined by the cost analysis).

int incr(int x) {
return x + 1;
}

// incr will not be hoisted since it is cheap(constant time)
void foo_linear(int size) {
int x = 10;
for (int i = 0; i < size; i++) {
incr(x); // constant call, don't hoist
}
}

// call to foo_linear will be hoisted since it is expensive(linear in size).
void symbolic_expensive_hoist(int size) {
for (int i = 0; i < size; i++) {
foo_linear(size); // hoist
}
}

EXPOSED_INSECURE_INTENT_HANDLING​

Reported as "Exposed Insecure Intent Handling" by quandary.

Undocumented.

GLOBAL_VARIABLE_INITIALIZED_WITH_FUNCTION_OR_METHOD_CALL​

Reported as "Global Variable Initialized With Function Or Method Call" by linters.

This checker warns you when the initialization of global variable contain a method or function call. The warning wants to make you aware that some functions are expensive. As the global variables are initialized before main() is called, these initializations can slow down the start-up time of an app.

GUARDEDBY_VIOLATION​

Reported as "GuardedBy Violation" by racerd.

A field annotated with @GuardedBy is being accessed by a call-chain that starts at a non-private method without synchronization.

Example:

class C {
@GuardedBy("this")
String f;

void foo(String s) {
f = s; // unprotected access here
}
}

Action: Protect the offending access by acquiring the lock indicated by the @GuardedBy(...).

IMPURE_FUNCTION​

Reported as "Impure Function" by impurity.

This issue type indicates impure functions. For instance, below functions would be marked as impure:

void makeAllZero_impure(ArrayList<Foo> list) {
Iterator<Foo> listIterator = list.iterator();
while (listIterator.hasNext()) {
Foo foo = listIterator.next();
foo.x = 0;
}
}

INEFFICIENT_KEYSET_ITERATOR​

Reported as "Inefficient Keyset Iterator" by inefficient-keyset-iterator.

This issue is raised when

  • iterating over a HashMap with ketSet() iterator
  • looking up the key each time

Instead, it is more efficient to iterate over the loop with entrySet which returns key-vaue pairs and gets rid of the hashMap lookup. For instance, we would raise an issue for the following program:

void inefficient_loop_bad(HashMap<String, Integer> testMap) {
for (String key : testMap.keySet()) {
Integer value = testMap.get(key); // extra look-up cost
foo(key, value);
}
}

Instead, it is more efficient to have:

void efficient_loop_ok(HashMap<String, Integer> testMap) {
for (Map.Entry<String, Integer> entry : testMap.entrySet()) {
String key = entry.getKey();
Integer value = entry.getValue();
foo(key, value);
}
}

INFERBO_ALLOC_IS_BIG​

Reported as "Inferbo Alloc Is Big" by bufferoverrun.

malloc is passed a large constant value.

INFERBO_ALLOC_IS_NEGATIVE​

Reported as "Inferbo Alloc Is Negative" by bufferoverrun.

malloc is called with a negative size.

INFERBO_ALLOC_IS_ZERO​

Reported as "Inferbo Alloc Is Zero" by bufferoverrun.

malloc is called with a zero size.

INFERBO_ALLOC_MAY_BE_BIG​

Reported as "Inferbo Alloc May Be Big" by bufferoverrun.

malloc may be called with a large value.

INFERBO_ALLOC_MAY_BE_NEGATIVE​

Reported as "Inferbo Alloc May Be Negative" by bufferoverrun.

malloc may be called with a negative value.

INFINITE_AUTORELEASEPOOL_SIZE​

Reported as "Infinite Autoreleasepool Size" by cost.

[EXPERIMENTAL] This warning indicates that Infer was not able to determine a static upper bound on the ObjC autoreleasepool's size in the procedure. By default, this issue type is disabled.

INFINITE_EXECUTION_TIME​

Reported as "Infinite Execution Time" by cost.

This warning indicates that Infer was not able to determine a static upper bound on the execution cost of the procedure. By default, this issue type is disabled.

For instance, Inferbo's interval analysis is limited to affine expressions. Hence, we can't statically estimate an upper bound on the below example and obtain T(unknown) cost:

// Expected: square root(x), got T
void square_root_FP(int x) {
int i = 0;
while (i * i < x) {
i++;
}
}

Consequently, we report an INFINITE_EXECUTION_TIME, corresponding to the biggest bound T.

INSECURE_INTENT_HANDLING​

Reported as "Insecure Intent Handling" by quandary.

Undocumented.

INTEGER_OVERFLOW_L1​

Reported as "Integer Overflow L1" by bufferoverrun.

Integer overflows reports fall into several "buckets" corresponding to the expected precision of the report. The higher the number, the more likely it is to be a false positive.

  • L1: The most faithful report, when it must be unsafe. For example, [2147483647,2147483647] + [1,1] in 32-bit signed integer type.

  • L2: Less faithful report than L1, when it may be unsafe. For example, [2147483647,2147483647] + [0,1] in 32-bit signed integer type. Note that the integer of RHS can be 0, which is safe.

  • L5: The reports that are not included in the above cases.

  • U5: A binary integer operation is unsafe by unknown values, which are usually from unknown function calls.

INTEGER_OVERFLOW_L2​

Reported as "Integer Overflow L2" by bufferoverrun.

See INTEGER_OVERFLOW_L1

INTEGER_OVERFLOW_L5​

Reported as "Integer Overflow L5" by bufferoverrun.

See INTEGER_OVERFLOW_L1

INTEGER_OVERFLOW_U5​

Reported as "Integer Overflow U5" by bufferoverrun.

See INTEGER_OVERFLOW_L1

INTERFACE_NOT_THREAD_SAFE​

Reported as "Interface Not Thread Safe" by racerd.

This error indicates that you have invoked an interface method not annotated with @ThreadSafe from a thread-safe context (e.g., code that uses locks or is marked @ThreadSafe). The fix is to add the @ThreadSafe annotation to the interface or to the interface method. For background on why these annotations are needed, see the detailed explanation here.

INVARIANT_CALL​

Reported as "Invariant Call" by loop-hoisting.

We report this issue type when a function call is loop-invariant and hoistable, i.e.

  • the function has no side side effects (pure)
  • has invariant arguments and result (i.e. have the same value in all loop iterations)
  • it is guaranteed to execute, i.e. it dominates all loop sources
int foo(int x, int y) {
return x + y;
}


void invariant_hoist(int size) {
int x = 10;
int y = 5;
for (int i = 0; i < size; i++) {
foo(x, y); // hoistable
}
}

IVAR_NOT_NULL_CHECKED​

Reported as "Ivar Not Null Checked" by biabduction.

This error type is only reported in Objective-C. This is similar to Null dereference, but Infer hasn't found a whole trace where the error can happen, but only found that a null dereference can happen if an instance variable of a parameter is nil. For example:

  -(int) foo {
B b* = [self->_a foo]; // sending a message with receiver nil returns nil
return b->x; // dereferencing b, potential NPE if you pass nil as the argument a.
}

Possible solutions are adding a check for nil, or making sure that the method is not called with nil.

JAVASCRIPT_INJECTION​

Reported as "Javascript Injection" by quandary.

Untrusted data flows into JavaScript.

LAB_RESOURCE_LEAK​

Reported as "Lab Resource Leak" by resource-leak-lab.

Toy issue.

LOCKLESS_VIOLATION​

Reported as "Lockless Violation" by starvation.

A method implements an interface signature annotated with @Lockless but which transitively acquires a lock.

Example:

Interface I {
@Lockless
public void no_lock();
}

class C implements I {
private synchronized do_lock() {}

public void no_lock() { // this method should not acquire any locks
do_lock();
}
}

LOCK_CONSISTENCY_VIOLATION​

Reported as "Lock Consistency Violation" by racerd.

This is a C++ and Objective C error reported whenever:

  • A class contains a member lock used for synchronization (most often a std::mutex).
  • It has a public method which writes to some member x while holding lock.
  • It has a public method which reads x without holding lock.

The above may happen through a chain of calls. Above, x may also be a container (an array, a vector, etc).

Fixing Lock Consistency Violation reports​

  • Avoid the offending access (most often the read). Of course, this may not be possible.
  • Use synchronization to protect the read, by using the same lock protecting the corresponding write.
  • Make the method doing the read access private. This should silence the warning, since Infer looks for a pair of non-private methods. Objective-C: Infer considers a method as private if it's not exported in the header-file interface.

LOGGING_PRIVATE_DATA​

Reported as "Logging Private Data" by quandary.

Undocumented.

MEMORY_LEAK​

Reported as "Memory Leak" by pulse.

Memory leak in C​

This error type is only reported in C and Objective-C code. In Java we do not report memory leaks because it is a garbage collected language.

In C, Infer reports memory leaks when objects are created with malloc and not freed. For example:

-(void) memory_leak_bug {
struct Person *p = malloc(sizeof(struct Person));
}

Memory leak in Objective-C​

Additionally, in Objective-C, Infer reports memory leaks that happen when objects from Core Foundation or Core Graphics don't get released.

-(void) memory_leak_bug_cf {
CGPathRef shadowPath = CGPathCreateWithRect(self.inputView.bounds, NULL); //object created and not released.
}

MISSING_REQUIRED_PROP​

Reported as "Missing Required Prop" by litho-required-props.

As explained by the analysis.

MIXED_SELF_WEAKSELF​

Reported as "Mixed Self WeakSelf" by self-in-block.

This happens when an Objective-C block captures both self and weakSelf, a weak pointer to self. Possibly the developer meant to capture only weakSelf to avoid a retain cycle, but made a typo and used self as well in the block, instead of strongSelf. In this case, this could cause a retain cycle.

MULTIPLE_WEAKSELF​

Reported as "Multiple WeakSelf Use" by self-in-block.

An Objective-C block uses weakSelf more than once. This could lead to unexpected behaviour. Even if weakSelf is not nil in the first use, it could be nil in the following uses since the object that weakSelf points to could be freed anytime. One should assign it to a strong pointer first, and then use it in the block.

MUTABLE_LOCAL_VARIABLE_IN_COMPONENT_FILE​

Reported as "Mutable Local Variable In Component File" by linters.

Doc in ComponentKit page

NULLPTR_DEREFERENCE​

Reported as "Nullptr Dereference" by pulse.

See NULL_DEREFERENCE.

NULL_DEREFERENCE​

Reported as "Null Dereference" by biabduction.

Infer reports null dereference bugs in C, Objective-C and Java. The issue is about a pointer that can be null and it is dereferenced. This leads to a crash in all the above languages.

Null dereference in C​

Here is an example of an inter-procedural null dereference bug in C:

struct Person {
int age;
int height;
int weight;
};
int get_age(struct Person *who) {
return who->age;
}
int null_pointer_interproc() {
struct Person *joe = 0;
return get_age(joe);
}

Null dereference in Objective-C​

In Objective-C, null dereferences are less common than in Java, but they still happen and their cause can be hidden. In general, passing a message to nil does not cause a crash and returns nil, but dereferencing a pointer directly does cause a crash as well as calling a nil block.C

-(void) foo:(void (^)())callback {
callback();
}

-(void) bar {
[self foo:nil]; //crash
}

Moreover, there are functions from the libraries that do not allow nil to be passed as argument. Here are some examples:

-(void) foo {
NSString *str = nil;
NSArray *animals = @[@"horse", str, @"dolphin"]; //crash
}

-(void) bar {
CGColorSpaceRef colorSpace = CGColorSpaceCreateDeviceRGB(); //can return NULL
...
CFRelease(colorSpace); //crashes if called with NULL
}

Null dereference in Java​

Many of Infer's reports of potential NPE's come from code of the form

  p = foo(); // foo() might return null
stuff();
p.goo(); // dereferencing p, potential NPE

If you see code of this form, then you have several options.

If you are unsure whether or not foo() will return null , you should ideally i. Change the code to ensure that foo() can not return null ii. Add a check for whether p is null, and do something other than dereferencing p when it is null.

Sometimes, in case ii it is not obvious what you should do when p is null. One possibility (a last option) is to throw an exception, failing early. This can be done using checkNotNull as in the following code:

  // code idiom for failing early

import static com.google.common.base.Preconditions.checkNotNull;

//... intervening code

p = checkNotNull(foo()); // foo() might return null
stuff();
p.goo(); // dereferencing p, potential NPE

The call checkNotNull(foo()) will never return null; in case foo() returns null it fails early by throwing an NPE.

If you are absolutely sure that foo() will not be null , then if you land your diff this case will no longer be reported after your diff makes it to master. In the future we might include analysis directives (hey, analyzer, p is not null!) like in Hack that tell the analyzer the information that you know, but that is for later.

OPTIONAL_EMPTY_ACCESS​

Reported as "Optional Empty Access" by pulse.

Reports on accessing folly::Optional when it is none.

PARAMETER_NOT_NULL_CHECKED​

Reported as "Parameter Not Null Checked" by biabduction.

This error type is reported only in Objective-C. It is similar to Null dereference, but Infer hasn't found a whole trace where the error can happen, but only found that a null dereference can happen if you call a method with nil as an argument. Therefore it is only a warning. For example:

  -(int) foo:(A* a) {
B b* = [a foo]; // sending a message with receiver nil returns nil
return b->x; // dereferencing b, potential NPE if you pass nil as the argument a.
}

or when the parameter is a block:

   -(void) foo:(void (^)(BOOL))block {
block(YES); // calling a nil block will cause a crash.
}

Possible solutions are adding a check for nil, or making sure that the method is not called with nil. When an argument will never be nil, you can add the annotation nonnull to the argument's type, to tell Infer (and the type system), that the argument won't be nil. This will silence the warning.

POINTER_TO_CONST_OBJC_CLASS​

Reported as "Pointer To Const Objc Class" by linters.

In Objective-C, const Class * represents a mutable pointer pointing to an Objective-C class where the ivars cannot be changed. More useful is Class *const instead, meaning the destination of the pointer cannot be changed.

PREMATURE_NIL_TERMINATION_ARGUMENT​

Reported as "Premature Nil Termination Argument" by biabduction.

This error type is reported in C and Objective-C. In many variadic methods, nil is used to signify the end of the list of input objects. This is similar to nil-termination of C strings. If one of the arguments that is not the last argument to the method is nil as well, Infer reports an error because that may lead to unexpected behavior.

An example of such variadic methods is arrayWithObjects

  NSArray *foo = [NSArray arrayWithObjects: @"aaa", str, @"bbb", nil];

In this example, if str is nil then an array @[@"aaa"] of size 1 will be created, and not an array @[@"aaa", str, @"bbb"] of size 3 as expected.

PURE_FUNCTION​

Reported as "Pure Function" by purity.

This issue type indicates pure functions. For instance, below functions would be marked as pure:

int local_write_pure(int x, int y) {
int k = x + y;
k++;
return k;
}

// no change to outside state, the local allocation is ok.
int local_alloc_pure(ArrayList<Integer> list) {
ArrayList<Integer> list_new = new ArrayList<Integer>();
for (Integer el : list) {
list_new.add(el);
}
return list_new.size();
}

However, the following ones would not be pure:

void swap_impure(int[] array, int i, int j) {
int tmp = array[i];
array[i] = array[j]; // modifying the input array
array[j] = tmp;
}

int a = 0;
void set_impure(int x, int y) {
a = x + y; //modifying a global variable
}

QUANDARY_TAINT_ERROR​

Reported as "Taint Error" by quandary.

Generic taint error when nothing else fits.

RESOURCE_LEAK​

Reported as "Resource Leak" by biabduction.

Infer reports resource leaks in C, Objective-C and Java. In general, resources are entities such as files, sockets, connections, etc, that need to be closed after being used.

Resource leak in C​

This is an example of a resource leak in C code:

-(void) resource_leak_bug {
FILE *fp;
fp=fopen("c:\\test.txt", "r"); // file opened and not closed.
}

Resource leak in Java​

For the remaining of this section, we will consider examples of resource leaks in Java code.

TIP: A common source of bugs is exceptions skipping past close() statements. That is the first thing to look for if INFER reports a potential resource leak.

Basics and Standard Idiom​

Some objects in Java, the resources, are supposed to be closed when you stop using them, and failure to close is a resource leak. Resources include input streams, output streams, readers, writers, sockets, http connections, cursors, and json parsers.

The standard idiom is

  // Standard idiom
Allocate resource
try {
do some stuff
} finally {
close resource
}

or more for example,

  //  Standard Idiom
public static void foo () throws IOException{
FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(new File("whatever.txt"));
try {
fos.write(7);
} finally {
fos.close();
}
}

and you should use the standard idiom for the most part, when you don't want to return the resource to the surrounding context.

Sometimes people just leave out close(), and that is a bug, but more typically exceptional paths are the root of the problem, as in

  // leak because of exception
public static void foo () throws IOException {
FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(new File("whatever.txt"));
fos.write(7); //DOH! What if exception?
fos.close();
}

where an exception in fos.write will cause execution to skip past the close() statement.

Multiple Resources Bugs​

We can deal with multiple resources correctly and simply just by nesting the standard idiom.

  // Two Resources nested
public static void foo() throws IOException {
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(new File("whatever.txt"));
try {
FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(new File("everwhat.txt"));
try {
fos.write(fis.read());
} finally {
fos.close();
}
} finally {
fis.close();
}
}

Bugs often occur when using multiple resources in other ways because of exceptions in close() methods. For example,

  // Classic Two Resources Bug
public static void foo() throws IOException {
FileInputStream fis = null;
FileOutputStream fos = null;
try {
fis = new FileInputStream(new File("whatever.txt"));
fos = new FileOutputStream(new File("everwhat.txt"));
fos.write(fis.read());
} finally {
if (fis!=null) fis.close();
if (fos!=null) fos.close();
}
}

Here, if there is an exception in the call to fis.close() execution will skip past fos.close(); a leak.

Another way, besides the standard idiom, to deal with this problem is to swallow exceptions.

  // Two Resources Fix 1
public static void foo() throws IOException {
FileInputStream fis = null;
FileOutputStream fos = null;
try {
fis = new FileInputStream(new File("whatever.txt"));
fos = new FileOutputStream(new File("everwhat.txt"));
fos.write(fis.read());
} finally {
try {
if (fis!=null) fis.close();
} catch (Exception e) {}; // Exception swallowing
if (fos!=null) fos.close();
}
}

You can also swallow the exception on the output stream. Some people prefer not to swallow output stream exceptions, and also flush before closing. http://code.google.com/p/guava-libraries/issues/detail?id=1118

Notice that the nested standard idiom does not need the checks for null, which are in there in this case to protect against the case when one of the allocations throws an exception, in which case one would get a NullPointerException.

Nested_Allocations​

When a resource allocation is included as an argument to a constructor, if the constructor fails it can leave an unreachable resource that no one can close.

For example gzipOutputStream = new GZIPOutputStream(new FileOutputStream(out)); is bad in case the outer constructor, GZIPOutputStream, throws an exception. In that case, no one will have a hold of the FileOutputStream and so no one will be able to close it.

In such a case you need to move the allocation the FileOutputStream out of the nested position and name it, so you are able to close if anything goes wrong during execution of the GZIPOutputStream constructor.

Here are resources that can throw exceptions i their constructor(s).

  • ObjectInputStream , ObjectOutputStream, PipedInputStream, PipedOutputStream, PipedReader, PipedWriter, JarInputStream, JarOutputStream, GZIPInputStream, GZIPOutputStream , ZipFile all throw IOException
  • PrintStream throws UnsupportedEncodingException

The constructors for FileInputStream, FileOutputStream and RandomAccessFile throw FileNotFoundException, but these cases are not problematic in the sense that their arguments are not resources and so they do not cause the nested resource leak.

Allocation of JSonParser and Cursor resources​

Some resources are created inside libraries instead of by "new".

Cursor is an interface, the actual resources are something like SQLiteCursor. So, every time you call a function that returns a Cursor object, there is an allocation.

For instance, in the functions from SQLiteDatabase query(…) and rawQuery(…) allocate a cursor resource. For SQLiteQueryBuilder, ContentProviderClient, ContentResolver. MediaStore and DownloadManager it is only query(…) Cursor objects cursor created by these functions need to be closed (i.e., cursor.close()).

Similarly, JsonParser is an abstract class, and create a resource in functions from the class JsonFactory createParser(byte[] data) createParser(byte[] data, int offset, int len) createParser(String content) createParser(URL url) createParser(File f) JsonParser objects js created by these functions need to be closed (jp.close()). On the other hand . JasonParsers gotten from createParser(InputStream in) and createParser(Reader r) give you JsonParsers that don’t need to be closed. This is because they receive the resource from somewhere that will maintain the responsibility to close it.

Escaping resources and exceptions​

Sometimes you want to return a resource to the outside, in which case you should not close it, but you still need to be careful of exceptions in case control skips past the return leaving no one to close. Here is a simple example of a positive use of escaping resources.

  // An escaping resource, shouldn't close
public BugReportAttachment createAttachment(File reportDirectory, String fileName)
throws FileNotFoundException {
File file = new File(reportDirectory, fileName);
OutputStream stream = new FileOutputStream(file);
return new BugReportAttachment(Uri.fromFile(file), stream);
}

In this case it is intended that an object that wraps stream is passed to the caller of createAttachment. You should certainly not close stream here, because it is being passed to the outside.

But for escaping resources like this you still need to be careful of exceptions. For example, in

  // An escaping resource, and a leak
public BugReportAttachment createAttachment(File reportDirectory, String fileName)
throws FileNotFoundException {
File file = new File(reportDirectory, fileName);
OutputStream stream = new FileOutputStream(file);
stream.write(7);
return new BugReportAttachment(Uri.fromFile(file), stream);
}

if stream.write(7) throws an exception, then no one will have a hold of stream, and no one will be able to close it; a leak.

Java 7's try-with-resources​

(For use with Java 7 only)

Clearly, accounting for the ramifications of all the exceptional cases is complicated, and there is a better way in Java 7.

  // Two Resources Fix 2; via try-with-resources
public static void foo() throws IOException {
try (
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(new File("whatever.txt"));
FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(new File("everwhat.txt"))
) {
fos.write(fis.read());
}
}

All the complicated exceptional cases above are (apparently) covered by this construct, and the result is much simpler.

So, if you are trying to fix a potential leak in code with multiples resources you can go ahead and try to understand whether the potential leak is real. Or, if the code is complex and it is hard to figure out, it would be perfectly legitimate to simply convert the code over to try-with-resources if you have access to Java 7, so as to save yourself some brain-cycles. You will also end up with cleaner code.

If try-with-resources is so great you should always use it. But you shouldn't… Try-with-resources gives resources static scoping, and works via a stack discipline. Sometimes, you want a resource to persist beyond scope, as in the escaping example above. In an escaping example maybe you could refactor lots of code so that try-with-resources applies, and maybe you cannot in a sensible way. This just illustrates that, though you might hear people say that try-with-resources "solves" the resource problem, it does not. It is very useful, but you cannot use it blindly when you see a resource-allocation site.

RETAIN_CYCLE​

Reported as "Retain Cycle" by biabduction.

A retain cycle is a situation when object A retains object B, and object B retains object A at the same time. Here is an example:

@class Child;
@interface Parent : NSObject {
Child *child; // Instance variables are implicitly __strong
}
@end
@interface Child : NSObject {
Parent *parent;
}
@end

You can fix a retain cycle in ARC by using __weak variables or weak properties for your "back links", i.e. links to direct or indirect parents in an object hierarchy:

@class Child;
@interface Parent : NSObject {
Child *child;
}
@end
@interface Child : NSObject {
__weak Parent *parent;
}
@end

SHELL_INJECTION​

Reported as "Shell Injection" by quandary.

Environment variable or file data flowing to shell.

SHELL_INJECTION_RISK​

Reported as "Shell Injection Risk" by quandary.

Code injection if the caller of the endpoint doesn't sanitize on its end.

SQL_INJECTION​

Reported as "Sql Injection" by quandary.

Untrusted and unescaped data flows to SQL.

SQL_INJECTION_RISK​

Reported as "Sql Injection Risk" by quandary.

Untrusted and unescaped data flows to SQL.

STACK_VARIABLE_ADDRESS_ESCAPE​

Reported as "Stack Variable Address Escape" by pulse.

Reported when an address pointing into the stack of the current function will escape to its calling context. Such addresses will become invalid by the time the function actually returns so are potentially dangerous.

For example, directly returning a pointer to a local variable:

int* foo() {
int x = 42;
return &x; // <-- warn here that "&x" will escape
}

STARVATION​

Reported as "UI Thread Starvation" by starvation.

This error is reported in Java, and specifically on Android. These reports are triggered when a method that runs on the UI thread may block, thus potentially leading to an Application Not Responding error.

Infer considers a method as running on the UI thread whenever:

  • The method, one of its overrides, its class, or an ancestral class, is annotated with @UiThread.
  • The method, or one of its overrides is annotated with @OnEvent, @OnClick, etc.
  • The method or its callees call a Litho.ThreadUtils method such as assertMainThread.

The issue is reported when a method deemed to run on the UI thread

  • Makes a method call which may block.
  • Takes a lock, and another thread takes the same lock, and before releasing it, makes a call that may block.

Calls that may block are considered:

  • Certain I/O calls.
  • Two way Binder.transact calls.
  • Certain OS calls.
  • Future or AsyncTask calls to get without timeouts, or with too large timeouts.

To suppress starvation reports in a method m() use the @SuppressLint("STARVATION") annotation, as follows:

  import android.annotation.SuppressLint;

@SuppressLint("STARVATION")
public void m() {
...
}

To signal to Infer that a method does not perform any blocking calls, despite appearences, you can use the @NonBlocking annotation:

  import com.facebook.infer.annotation.NonBlocking;

@NonBlocking
public void m() {
...
}

This instructs Infer to filter out any potentially blocking calls in m() (also, transitively), and thus any other method can expect no starvation reports due to a call to m(). You will need to set up your class path appropriately to include the JAR files in infer/annotations for this annotation to work.

STATIC_INITIALIZATION_ORDER_FIASCO​

Reported as "Static Initialization Order Fiasco" by siof.

This error is reported in C++. It fires when the initialization of a static variable A, accesses a static variable B from another translation unit (usually another .cpp file). There are no guarantees whether B has been already initialized or not at that point.

For more technical definition and techniques to avoid/remediate, see the FAQ.

STRICT_MODE_VIOLATION​

Reported as "Strict Mode Violation" by starvation.

Android has a feature called strict mode, which if enabled, will flag the occasions where the main thread makes a call that results in disk I/O, waiting on a network socket, etc. The analysis catching starvation errors and deadlocks (the --starvation analysis) has the ability to statically detect such violations.

To suppress this warning, it's enough to annotate the offending method with @SuppressLint("STRICT_MODE_VIOLATION").

STRONG_DELEGATE_WARNING​

Reported as "Strong Delegate Warning" by linters.

This check warns you when you have a property called delegate or variations thereof which is declared strong. The idea is that delegates should generally be weak, otherwise this may cause retain cycles.

STRONG_SELF_NOT_CHECKED​

Reported as "StrongSelf Not Checked" by self-in-block.

When a block captures weakSelf in the following pattern:

__weak __typeof(self) weakSelf = self;
int (^my_block)() = ^() {
__strong __typeof(weakSelf) strongSelf = weakSelf;
int y = strongSelf->x;

the variable strongSelf should be checked for null before being used, otherwise this could cause a crash because the weak pointer weakSelf could be null.

THREAD_SAFETY_VIOLATION​

Reported as "Thread Safety Violation" by racerd.

This warning indicates a potential data race in Java. The analyser is called RacerD and this section gives brief but a mostly complete description of its features. See the RacerD page for more in-depth information and examples.

Thread-safety: What is a data race​

Here a data race is a pair of accesses to the same member field such that:

  • at least one is a write, and,
  • at least one occurs without any lock synchronization, and,
  • the two accesses occur on threads (if known) which can run in parallel.

Thread-safety: Potential fixes​

  • Synchronizing the accesses (using the synchronized keyword, thread-exclusion such as atomic objects, volatile etc).
  • Making an offending method private -- this will exclude it from being checked at the top level, though it will be checked if called by a public method which may itself, e.g., hold a lock when calling it.
  • Putting the two accesses on the same thread, e.g., by using @MainThread or @ThreadConfined.

Thread-safety: Conditions checked before reporting​

The class and method are not marked @ThreadSafe(enableChecks = false), and,

  • The method is declared synchronized, or employs (non-transitively) locking, or,
  • The class is not marked @NotThreadSafe, and,
    • The class/method is marked @ThreadSafe, or one of the configured synonyms in .inferconfig, or,
    • A parent class, or an override method are marked with the above annotations.

NB currently RacerD does not take into account @GuardedBy.

Thread-safety: Thread annotations recognized by RacerD​

These class and method annotations imply the method is on the main thread: @MainThread, @UiThread

These method annotations imply the method is on the main thread: @OnBind, @OnEvent, @OnMount, @OnUnbind, @OnUnmount

Both classes of annotations work through the inheritance tree (i.e. if a parent class or method is marked with one of these annotations, so is the child class / method override).

In addition to these, RacerD recognizes many lifecycle methods as necessarily running on the main thread, eg Fragment.onCreate etc.

Finally, the thread status of being on the main thread propagates backwards through the call graph (ie if foo calls bar and bar is marked @UiThtread then foo is automatically considered on the main thread too). Calling assertMainThread, assertOnUiThread, checkOnMainThread has the same effect.

NB RacerD currently does not recognize @WorkerThread, @BinderThread or @AnyThread.

Thread-safety: Other annotations and what they do​

These annotations can be found at com.facebook.infer.annotation.*.

  • @Functional This is a method annotation indicating the method always returns the same value. When a method foo is annotated @Functional, RacerD will ignore any writes of the return value of foo. For example, in this.x = foo(), the write to this.x is ignored. The reasoning is that if the method returns the same value whenever it's called, any data race on this.x is benign, if that is the only write.

  • @ThreadConfined This is a class/method/field annotation which takes a single parameter which can be UI, ANY or a user chosen string. It indicates to RacerD a thread identifier for the class/method/field. Thus, @ThreadConfined(UI) is equivalent to @UiThread, and @ThreadConfined(ANY) is equivalent to not having the annotation at all, for classes and methods. When this annotation is applied to a field it instructs Infer to assume (without checking) that all accesses to that field are made on the same thread (and can, therefore, not race by definition). The intention is that RacerD uses that to detect exclusion between accesses occurring on the same thread. However, only the UI thread is supported at this time, and any user provided value is considered equal to UI.

  • @VisibleForTesting A method annotation making Infer consider the method as effectively private. This means it will not be checked for races against other non-private methods of the class, but only if called by one.

  • @ReturnsOwnership A method annotation indicating that the method returns a freshly owned object. Accesses to the returned value will not be considered for data races, as the object is in-effect unique and not accessible yet from other threads. The main utility of this annotation is in interfaces, where Infer cannot look up the implementation and decide for itself.

TOPL_BIABD_ERROR​

Reported as "Topl Biabd Error" by topl-biabd.

Experimental.

TOPL_PULSE_ERROR​

Reported as "Topl Pulse Error" by topl-pulse.

Experimental.

UNINITIALIZED_VALUE​

Reported as "Uninitialized Value" by uninit.

A value is read before it has been initialized. For example, in C:

struct coordinates {
int x;
int y;
};

void foo() {
struct coordinates c;
c.x = 42;
c.y++; // uninitialized value c.y!

int z;
if (z == 0) { // uninitialized value z!
// something
}
}

UNREACHABLE_CODE​

Reported as "Unreachable Code" by bufferoverrun.

A program point is unreachable.

UNTRUSTED_BUFFER_ACCESS​

Reported as "Untrusted Buffer Access" by quandary.

Untrusted data of any kind flowing to buffer.

UNTRUSTED_DESERIALIZATION​

Reported as "Untrusted Deserialization" by quandary.

User-controlled deserialization.

UNTRUSTED_DESERIALIZATION_RISK​

Reported as "Untrusted Deserialization Risk" by quandary.

User-controlled deserialization

UNTRUSTED_ENVIRONMENT_CHANGE_RISK​

Reported as "Untrusted Environment Change Risk" by quandary.

User-controlled environment mutation.

UNTRUSTED_FILE​

Reported as "Untrusted File" by quandary.

User-controlled file creation; may be vulnerable to path traversal and more.

UNTRUSTED_FILE_RISK​

Reported as "Untrusted File Risk" by quandary.

User-controlled file creation; may be vulnerable to path traversal and more.

UNTRUSTED_HEAP_ALLOCATION​

Reported as "Untrusted Heap Allocation" by quandary.

Untrusted data of any kind flowing to heap allocation. this can cause crashes or DOS.

UNTRUSTED_INTENT_CREATION​

Reported as "Untrusted Intent Creation" by quandary.

Creating an Intent from user-controlled data.

UNTRUSTED_URL_RISK​

Reported as "Untrusted Url Risk" by quandary.

Untrusted flag, environment variable, or file data flowing to URL.

UNTRUSTED_VARIABLE_LENGTH_ARRAY​

Reported as "Untrusted Variable Length Array" by quandary.

Untrusted data of any kind flowing to stack buffer allocation. Trying to allocate a stack buffer that's too large will cause a stack overflow.

USER_CONTROLLED_SQL_RISK​

Reported as "User Controlled Sql Risk" by quandary.

Untrusted data flows to SQL (no injection risk).

USE_AFTER_DELETE​

Reported as "Use After Delete" by pulse.

An address that was invalidated by a call to delete in C++ is dereferenced.

USE_AFTER_FREE​

Reported as "Use After Free" by pulse.

An address that was invalidated by a call to free in C is dereferenced.

USE_AFTER_LIFETIME​

Reported as "Use After Lifetime" by pulse.

The lifetime of an object has ended but that object is being accessed. For example, the address of a variable holding a C++ object is accessed after the variable has gone out of scope:

void foo() {
X* p;
{ // new scope
X x = X();
p = &x;
} // x has gone out of scope
p->method(); // ERROR: you should not access *p after x has gone out of scope
}

VECTOR_INVALIDATION​

Reported as "Vector Invalidation" by pulse.

An address pointing into a C++ std::vector might have become invalid. This can happen when an address is taken into a vector, then the vector is mutated in a way that might invalidate the address, for example by adding elements to the vector, which might trigger a re-allocation of the entire vector contents (thereby invalidating the pointers into the previous location of the contents).

For example:

void deref_vector_element_after_push_back_bad(std::vector<int>& vec) {
int* elt = &vec[1];
vec.push_back(42); // if the array backing the vector was full already, this
// will re-allocate it and copy the previous contents
// into the new array, then delete the previous array
std::cout << *y << "\n"; // bad: elt might be invalid
}

WEAK_SELF_IN_NO_ESCAPE_BLOCK​

Reported as "Weak Self In No Escape Block" by self-in-block.

In many methods that take a block as an argument, the block position is annotated with NS_NOESCAPE to mark that the block passed to this method won't be leaving the current scope. In those cases, there is no need to use weakSelf to avoid the block to capture self. This issue type flags this case.