ScanfFormatString.cpp 6.9 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218
  1. //= ScanfFormatString.cpp - Analysis of printf format strings --*- C++ -*-===//
  2. //
  3. // The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
  4. //
  5. // This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
  6. // License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
  7. //
  8. //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
  9. //
  10. // Handling of format string in scanf and friends. The structure of format
  11. // strings for fscanf() are described in C99 7.19.6.2.
  12. //
  13. //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
  14. #include "clang/Analysis/Analyses/FormatString.h"
  15. #include "FormatStringParsing.h"
  16. using clang::analyze_format_string::ArgTypeResult;
  17. using clang::analyze_format_string::FormatStringHandler;
  18. using clang::analyze_format_string::LengthModifier;
  19. using clang::analyze_format_string::OptionalAmount;
  20. using clang::analyze_scanf::ConversionSpecifier;
  21. using clang::analyze_scanf::ScanfSpecifier;
  22. typedef clang::analyze_format_string::SpecifierResult<ScanfSpecifier>
  23. ScanfSpecifierResult;
  24. static bool ParseScanList(FormatStringHandler &H,
  25. ConversionSpecifier &CS,
  26. const char *&Beg, const char *E) {
  27. const char *I = Beg;
  28. const char *start = I - 1;
  29. UpdateOnReturn <const char*> UpdateBeg(Beg, I);
  30. // No more characters?
  31. if (I == E) {
  32. H.HandleIncompleteScanList(start, I);
  33. return true;
  34. }
  35. // Special case: ']' is the first character.
  36. if (*I == ']') {
  37. if (++I == E) {
  38. H.HandleIncompleteScanList(start, I - 1);
  39. return true;
  40. }
  41. }
  42. // Look for a ']' character which denotes the end of the scan list.
  43. while (*I != ']') {
  44. if (++I == E) {
  45. H.HandleIncompleteScanList(start, I - 1);
  46. return true;
  47. }
  48. }
  49. CS.setEndScanList(I);
  50. return false;
  51. }
  52. // FIXME: Much of this is copy-paste from ParsePrintfSpecifier.
  53. // We can possibly refactor.
  54. static ScanfSpecifierResult ParseScanfSpecifier(FormatStringHandler &H,
  55. const char *&Beg,
  56. const char *E,
  57. unsigned &argIndex) {
  58. using namespace clang::analyze_scanf;
  59. const char *I = Beg;
  60. const char *Start = 0;
  61. UpdateOnReturn <const char*> UpdateBeg(Beg, I);
  62. // Look for a '%' character that indicates the start of a format specifier.
  63. for ( ; I != E ; ++I) {
  64. char c = *I;
  65. if (c == '\0') {
  66. // Detect spurious null characters, which are likely errors.
  67. H.HandleNullChar(I);
  68. return true;
  69. }
  70. if (c == '%') {
  71. Start = I++; // Record the start of the format specifier.
  72. break;
  73. }
  74. }
  75. // No format specifier found?
  76. if (!Start)
  77. return false;
  78. if (I == E) {
  79. // No more characters left?
  80. H.HandleIncompleteSpecifier(Start, E - Start);
  81. return true;
  82. }
  83. ScanfSpecifier FS;
  84. if (ParseArgPosition(H, FS, Start, I, E))
  85. return true;
  86. if (I == E) {
  87. // No more characters left?
  88. H.HandleIncompleteSpecifier(Start, E - Start);
  89. return true;
  90. }
  91. // Look for '*' flag if it is present.
  92. if (*I == '*') {
  93. FS.setSuppressAssignment(I);
  94. if (++I == E) {
  95. H.HandleIncompleteSpecifier(Start, E - Start);
  96. return true;
  97. }
  98. }
  99. // Look for the field width (if any). Unlike printf, this is either
  100. // a fixed integer or isn't present.
  101. const OptionalAmount &Amt = clang::analyze_format_string::ParseAmount(I, E);
  102. if (Amt.getHowSpecified() != OptionalAmount::NotSpecified) {
  103. assert(Amt.getHowSpecified() == OptionalAmount::Constant);
  104. FS.setFieldWidth(Amt);
  105. if (I == E) {
  106. // No more characters left?
  107. H.HandleIncompleteSpecifier(Start, E - Start);
  108. return true;
  109. }
  110. }
  111. // Look for the length modifier.
  112. if (ParseLengthModifier(FS, I, E) && I == E) {
  113. // No more characters left?
  114. H.HandleIncompleteSpecifier(Start, E - Start);
  115. return true;
  116. }
  117. // Detect spurious null characters, which are likely errors.
  118. if (*I == '\0') {
  119. H.HandleNullChar(I);
  120. return true;
  121. }
  122. // Finally, look for the conversion specifier.
  123. const char *conversionPosition = I++;
  124. ConversionSpecifier::Kind k = ConversionSpecifier::InvalidSpecifier;
  125. switch (*conversionPosition) {
  126. default:
  127. break;
  128. case '%': k = ConversionSpecifier::PercentArg; break;
  129. case 'A': k = ConversionSpecifier::AArg; break;
  130. case 'E': k = ConversionSpecifier::EArg; break;
  131. case 'F': k = ConversionSpecifier::FArg; break;
  132. case 'G': k = ConversionSpecifier::GArg; break;
  133. case 'X': k = ConversionSpecifier::XArg; break;
  134. case 'a': k = ConversionSpecifier::aArg; break;
  135. case 'd': k = ConversionSpecifier::dArg; break;
  136. case 'e': k = ConversionSpecifier::eArg; break;
  137. case 'f': k = ConversionSpecifier::fArg; break;
  138. case 'g': k = ConversionSpecifier::gArg; break;
  139. case 'i': k = ConversionSpecifier::iArg; break;
  140. case 'n': k = ConversionSpecifier::nArg; break;
  141. case 'c': k = ConversionSpecifier::cArg; break;
  142. case 'C': k = ConversionSpecifier::CArg; break;
  143. case 'S': k = ConversionSpecifier::SArg; break;
  144. case '[': k = ConversionSpecifier::ScanListArg; break;
  145. case 'u': k = ConversionSpecifier::uArg; break;
  146. case 'x': k = ConversionSpecifier::xArg; break;
  147. case 'o': k = ConversionSpecifier::oArg; break;
  148. case 's': k = ConversionSpecifier::sArg; break;
  149. }
  150. ConversionSpecifier CS(conversionPosition, k);
  151. if (k == ConversionSpecifier::ScanListArg) {
  152. if (!ParseScanList(H, CS, I, E))
  153. return true;
  154. }
  155. FS.setConversionSpecifier(CS);
  156. if (CS.consumesDataArgument() && !FS.getSuppressAssignment()
  157. && !FS.usesPositionalArg())
  158. FS.setArgIndex(argIndex++);
  159. // FIXME: '%' and '*' doesn't make sense. Issue a warning.
  160. // FIXME: 'ConsumedSoFar' and '*' doesn't make sense.
  161. if (k == ConversionSpecifier::InvalidSpecifier) {
  162. // Assume the conversion takes one argument.
  163. return !H.HandleInvalidScanfConversionSpecifier(FS, Beg, I - Beg);
  164. }
  165. return ScanfSpecifierResult(Start, FS);
  166. }
  167. bool clang::analyze_format_string::ParseScanfString(FormatStringHandler &H,
  168. const char *I,
  169. const char *E) {
  170. unsigned argIndex = 0;
  171. // Keep looking for a format specifier until we have exhausted the string.
  172. while (I != E) {
  173. const ScanfSpecifierResult &FSR = ParseScanfSpecifier(H, I, E, argIndex);
  174. // Did a fail-stop error of any kind occur when parsing the specifier?
  175. // If so, don't do any more processing.
  176. if (FSR.shouldStop())
  177. return true;;
  178. // Did we exhaust the string or encounter an error that
  179. // we can recover from?
  180. if (!FSR.hasValue())
  181. continue;
  182. // We have a format specifier. Pass it to the callback.
  183. if (!H.HandleScanfSpecifier(FSR.getValue(), FSR.getStart(),
  184. I - FSR.getStart())) {
  185. return true;
  186. }
  187. }
  188. assert(I == E && "Format string not exhausted");
  189. return false;
  190. }