| #!/usr/bin/perl |
| |
| # Check for malloc calls not shortly followed by initialisation. |
| # |
| # Known limitations: |
| # - false negative: can't see allocations spanning more than one line |
| # - possible false negatives, see patterns |
| # - false positive: malloc-malloc-init-init is not accepted |
| # - false positives: "non-standard" init functions (eg, the things being |
| # initialised is not the first arg, or initialise struct members) |
| # |
| # Since false positives are expected, the results must be manually reviewed. |
| # |
| # Typical usage: scripts/malloc-init.pl library/*.c |
| |
| use warnings; |
| use strict; |
| |
| use utf8; |
| use open qw(:std utf8); |
| |
| my $limit = 7; |
| my $inits = qr/memset|memcpy|_init|fread|base64_..code/; |
| |
| # cases to bear in mind: |
| # |
| # 0. foo = malloc(...); memset( foo, ... ); |
| # 1. *foo = malloc(...); memset( *foo, ... ); |
| # 2. type *foo = malloc(...); memset( foo, ...); |
| # 3. foo = malloc(...); foo_init( (type *) foo ); |
| # 4. foo = malloc(...); for(i=0..n) { init( &foo[i] ); } |
| # |
| # The chosen patterns are a bit relaxed, but unlikely to cause false positives |
| # in real code (initialising *foo or &foo instead of foo will likely be caught |
| # by functional tests). |
| # |
| my $id = qr/([a-zA-Z-0-9_\->\.]*)/; |
| my $prefix = qr/\s(?:\*?|\&?|\([a-z_]* \*\))\s*/; |
| |
| my $name; |
| my $line; |
| my @bad; |
| |
| die "Usage: $0 file.c [...]\n" unless @ARGV; |
| |
| while (my $file = shift @ARGV) |
| { |
| open my $fh, "<", $file or die "read $file failed: $!\n"; |
| while (<$fh>) |
| { |
| if( /mbedtls_malloc\(/ ) { |
| if( /$id\s*=.*mbedtls_malloc\(/ ) { |
| push @bad, "$file:$line:$name" if $name; |
| $name = $1; |
| $line = $.; |
| } else { |
| push @bad, "$file:$.:???" unless /return mbedtls_malloc/; |
| } |
| } elsif( $name && /(?:$inits)\($prefix\Q$name\E\b/ ) { |
| undef $name; |
| } elsif( $name && $. - $line > $limit ) { |
| push @bad, "$file:$line:$name"; |
| undef $name; |
| undef $line; |
| } |
| } |
| close $fh or die; |
| } |
| |
| print "$_\n" for @bad; |